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

Light echoes of core collapse supernovae

11 Aug 2011, 16:30
30m
Oskar Klein (AlbaNova University Center)

Oskar Klein

AlbaNova University Center

Speaker

Dr Oliver Krause (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy)

Description

Young Galactic supernova remnants are unique laboratories for supernova physics. Due to their proximity they provide us with the most detailed view of the outcome of a supernova. However, the exact spectroscopic types of their original explosions have been undetermined so far - hindering to link the wealth of multi-wavelength knowledge about their remnants with the diverse population of supernovae. Light echoes, reflections of the brilliant supernova burst of light by interstellar dust, provide a unique opportunity to re-observe today - with powerful scientific instruments of the 21st century - historic supernova explosions even after hundreds of years and to conclude on their nature. We report on optical light-echo spectroscopy of two Galactic supernovae, in particular the youngest known CC SN Cas A. These observations finally recovered the missing spectroscopic classifications and provide new constraints on explosion models for future studies.

Primary author

Dr Oliver Krause (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy)

Presentation materials

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