10–13 Aug 2011
AlbaNova University Center
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Do Pair-Production Supernovae exist in nature?

10 Aug 2011, 17:00
30m
Oskar Klein (AlbaNova University Center)

Oskar Klein

AlbaNova University Center

Speaker

Dr Avishay Gal-Yam (Weizmann Institute Of Science)

Description

The theoretical prediction that stars that develop heavy oxygen cores will become pair-unstable and explode has been made many decades ago. Yet, for many years, no examples of such explosions were found, and it was often conjectured that stars massive enough to explode in this manner may only exist at very high redshifts (population III stars). In recent years several luminous supernova explosions have been detected, and some of them have been proposed to result from this mechanism. I will review the theoretical predictions for pair-instability supernovae and confront them with observations, showing that indeed at least one object, SN 2007bi, is a convincing example of a pair-instability supernova. I will describe additional examples recently detected both nearby and in the distant Universe, and comment about the implications for stellar evolution models, the chemical evolution of the Universe, and future detection of the first stars.

Primary author

Dr Avishay Gal-Yam (Weizmann Institute Of Science)

Presentation materials

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