Taketoshi Yoshii
Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Taketoshi Yoshii.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2014
Nozomu Tominaga; Masaomi Tanaka; Kensho Mori; Emiko Matsumoto; Yuki Kikuchi; Takumi Shibata; Shigeyuki Sako; Tsutomu Aoki; Mamoru Doi; Naoto Kobayashi; Hiroyuki Maehara; Noriyuki Matsunaga; Hiroyuki Mito; Takashi Miyata; Yoshikazu Nakada; Takao Soyano; Ken'ichi Tarusawa; Satoshi Miyazaki; Fumiaki Nakata; Norio Okada; Yuki Sarugaku; Michael W. Richmond; Hiroshi Akitaya; G. Aldering; Ko Arimatsu; Carlos Contreras; Takashi Horiuchi; E. Y. Hsiao; R. Itoh; Ikuru Iwata
The Kiso Supernova Survey (KISS) is a high-cadence optical wide-field supernova (SN) survey. The primary goal of the survey is to catch the very early light of a SN, during the shock breakout phase. Detection of SN shock breakouts combined with multi-band photometry obtained with other facilities would provide detailed physical information on the progenitor stars of SNe. The survey is performed using a 2.2x2.2 deg field-of-view instrument on the 1.05-m Kiso Schmidt telescope, the Kiso Wide Field Camera (KWFC). We take a three-minute exposure in g-band once every hour in our survey, reaching magnitude g~20-21. About 100 nights of telescope time per year have been spent on the survey since April 2012. The number of the shock breakout detections is estimated to be of order of 1 during our 3-year project. This paper summarizes the KISS project including the KWFC observing setup, the survey strategy, the data reduction system, and CBET-reported SNe discovered so far by KISS.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Masaomi Tanaka; R. Itoh; Hiroshi Akitaya; Nozomu Tominaga; Yoshihiko Saito; Y. Tanaka; P. Gandhi; Gamal B. Ali; Tsutomu Aoki; Carlos Contreras; Mamoru Doi; Ahmad Essam; Gamal Hamed; E. Y. Hsiao; Ikuru Iwata; Koji S. Kawabata; Nobuyuki Kawai; Yuki Kikuchi; Naoto Kobayashi; Daisuke Kuroda; Hiroyuki Maehara; Emiko Matsumoto; Paolo A. Mazzali; Takeo Minezaki; Hiroyuki Mito; Takashi Miyata; Satoshi Miyazaki; Kensho Mori; Yuki Moritani; Kana Morokuma-Matsui
We present our discovery of dramatic variability in SDSS J1100+4421 by the high-cadence transient survey Kiso Supernova Survey (KISS). The source brightened in the optical by at least a factor of three within about half a day. Spectroscopic observations suggest that this object is likely a narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy (NLS1) at z=0.840, however with unusually strong narrow emission lines. The estimated black hole mass of ~ 10^7 Msun implies bolometric nuclear luminosity close to the Eddington limit. SDSS J1100+4421 is also extremely radio-loud, with a radio loudness parameter of R ~ 4 x 10^2 - 3 x 10^3, which implies the presence of relativistic jets. Rapid and large-amplitude optical variability of the target, reminiscent of that found in a few radio- and gamma-ray loud NLS1s, is therefore produced most likely in a blazar-like core. The 1.4 GHz radio image of the source shows an extended structure with a linear size of about 100 kpc. If SDSS J1100+4421 is a genuine NLS1, as suggested here, this radio structure would then be the largest ever discovered in this type of active galaxies
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2014
Motoko Serino; Takanori Sakamoto; Nobuyuki Kawai; Atsumasa Yoshida; M. Ohno; Yuji Ogawa; Yasunori Nishimura; Kosuke Fukushima; Masaya Higa; Kazuto Ishikawa; Masaki Ishikawa; Taiki Kawamuro; Masashi Kimura; Masaru Matsuoka; Tatehiro Mihara; Mikio Morii; Yujin E. Nakagawa; Satoshi Nakahira; Motoki Nakajima; Yuki Nakano; Hitoshi Negoro; Takuya Onodera; Masayuki Sasaki; Megumi Shidatsu; Juri Sugimoto; Mutsumi Sugizaki; Fumitoshi Suwa; Kazuhiko Suzuki; Yutaro Tachibana; Toshihiro Takagi
Monitor of all-sky image (MAXI) Gas Slit Camera (GSC) detects gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) including the bursts with soft spectra, such as X-ray flashes (XRFs). MAXI/GSC is sensitive to the energy range from 2 to 30 keV. This energy range is lower than other currently operating instruments which is capable of detecting GRBs. Since the beginning of the MAXI operation on August 15, 2009, GSC observed 35 GRBs up to the middle of 2013. One third of them are also observed by other satellites. The rest of them show a trend to have soft spectra and low fluxes. Because of the contribution of those XRFs, the MAXI GRB rate is about three times higher than those expected from the BATSE log N – log P distribution. When we compare it to the observational results of the Wide-field X-ray Monitor on the High Energy Transient Explorer 2, which covers the the same energy range to that of MAXI/GSC, we find a possibility that many of MAXI bursts are XRFs with Epeak lower than 20 keV. We discuss the source of soft GRBs observed only by MAXI. The MAXI log N – log S distribution suggests that the MAXI XRFs distribute in closer distance than hard GRBs. Since the distributions of the hardness of galactic stellar flares and X-ray bursts overlap with those of MAXI GRBs, we discuss a possibility of a confusion of those galactic transients with the MAXI GRB samples.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Yoichi Yatsu; J. Kataoka; Y. Takahashi; Yutaro Tachibana; Nobuyuki Kawai; Shimpei Shibata; Sean Pike; Taketoshi Yoshii; Makoto Arimoto; Yoshihiko Saito; Takeshi Nakamori; Kazuhiro Sekiguchi; Daisuke Kuroda; Kenshi Yanagisawa; Hidekazu Hanayama; Makoto Watanabe; Ko Hamamoto; Hikaru Nakao; Akihito Ozaki; Kentaro Motohara; Masahiro Konishi; Ken Tateuchi; Noriyuki Matsunaga; Takahiro Nagayama; Katsuhiro L. Murata; Hiroshi Akitaya; Michitoshi Yoshida; Gamal B. Ali; A. Essam Mohamed; Mizuki Isogai
Multi-wavelength observations of the black-widow binary system 2FGL J2339.6-0532 are reported. The Fermi gamma-ray source 2FGL J2339.6-0532 was recently categorized as a black widow in which a recycled millisecond pulsar (MSP) is evaporating up the companion star with its powerful pulsar wind. Our optical observations show clear sinusoidal light curves due to the asymmetric temperature distribution of the companion star. Assuming a simple geometry, we constrained the range of the inclination angle of the binary system to 52
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016
Yutaro Tachibana; Taiki Kawamuro; Yoshihiro Ueda; Megumi Shidatsu; Makoto Arimoto; Taketoshi Yoshii; Yoichi Yatsu; Yoshihiko Saito; Sean Pike; Nobuyuki Kawai
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2018
Sili Wang; Nobuyuki Kawai; Megumi Shidatsu; Yutaro Tachibana; Taketoshi Yoshii; Masayuki Sudo; Aya Kubota
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2018
Yutaro Tachibana; Makoto Arimoto; Katsuaki Asano; Shohei Harita; Taichi Fujiwara; Taketoshi Yoshii; R. Itoh; Katsuhiro L. Murata; Yoichi Yatsu; Kotaro Morita; Nobuyuki Kawai
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Megumi Shidatsu; Yutaro Tachibana; Taketoshi Yoshii; Hitoshi Negoro; Taiki Kawamuro; W. Iwakiri; Satoshi Nakahira; Kazuo Makishima; Yoshihiro Ueda; Nobuyuki Kawai; Motoko Serino; J. A. Kennea
, which enables us to discuss the interaction between the pulsar wind and the companion in detail. The X-ray spectrum consists of two components: a soft, steady component that seems to originate from the surface of the MSP, and a hard variable component from the wind-termination shock near the companion star. The measured X-ray luminosity is comparable to the bolometric luminosity of the companion, meaning that the heating efficiency is less than 0.5. In the companion orbit, 10
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union | 2016
Yutaro Tachibana; Taketoshi Yoshii; Nobuyuki Kawai
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Tanaka Y.~T; 伊藤亮介; Y. Tanaka; 谷津陽一; 吉井健敏; 橘優太朗; 藤原太智; 斉藤嘉彦; R. Itoh; Makoto Uemura; Yoshiyuki Inoue; C. C. Cheung; Cheung C.~C; Makoto Watanabe; Kawabata K.~S; Koji S. Kawabata; Yasushi Fukazawa; Yoichi Yatsu; Taketoshi Yoshii; Yutaro Tachibana; Taichi Fujiwara; Yoshihiko Saito; Nobuyuki Kawai; Masashi Kimura; Keisuke Isogai; Taichi Kato; Miho Kawabata; Hiroshi Akitaya; Tatsuya Nakaoka; Kensei Shiki
cm from the pulsar, the pulsar wind is already in particle dominant-stage, with a magnetization parameter of