PhD thesis defence: The Frequency of Supernovae in the Early Universe
by
DrJens Melinder(Stockholm University)
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Europe/Stockholm
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Description
Supernovae are cosmic explosions of cataclysmic proportion that signify
the death of a star. While being interesting phenomena in their own
right, their brightness also make them excellent probes of the early
universe. Depending on the type of the progenitor star and the origin of
the explosion different subjects can be investigated. In this
dissertation the work I have done on the detection, characterisation and
rate measurements of supernovae in the Stockholm VIMOS Supernova Search
is presented. We have discovered 16 supernovae that exploded billions of
years ago (or, equivalently, at high redshift, z). The observed
brightness and colour evolution have been used to classify the
supernovae into either thermonuclear (type Ia) or core collapse (type
II) supernovae. The accuracy of the classification code used in this
work is high, only about 5% of the supernovae are mistyped, similar to
other codes of the same kind. By comparing the observed frequency of
supernovae to simulations the underlying supernova rate at these high
redshifts have been measured. The main result reported in this thesis is
that the core collapse supernova rate at high redshift matches the rates
estimated from looking at the star formation history of the universe,
and agree well with previous studies. The rate of Ia supernovae at high
redshift have been investigated by several projects, our results show a
somewhat higher rate of Ia supernovae than expected. Proper estimates of
the systematic errors of rate measurements are found to be very
important. Furthermore, by using novel techniques for reducing and
stacking images, we have obtained a galaxy sample containing
approximately 50,000 galaxies. Photometric redshifts have been obtained
for most of the galaxies, the resulting accuracy below z ~ 1 is on the
order of 10%. The galaxy sample have also been used to find high
redshift sources, so called Lyman Break Galaxies, at z ~ 3-5.