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Type Ia supernovae: explosions and progenitors

dc.contributor.authorKerzendorf, Wolfgang Eitel
dc.date.accessioned2013-08-02T05:13:04Z
dc.date.available2013-08-02T05:13:04Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.description.abstractSupernovae are the brightest explosions in the universe. Supernovae in our Galaxy, rare and happening only every few centuries, have probably been observed since the beginnings of mankind. At first they were interpreted as religious omens but in the last half millennium they have increasingly been used to study the cosmos and our place in it. Tycho Brahe deduced from his observations of the famous supernova in 1572, that the stars, in contrast to the widely believe Aristotelian doctrine, were not immutable. More than 400 years after Tycho made his paradigm changing discovery using SN 1572, and some 60 years after supernovae had been identified as distant dying stars, two teams changed the view of the world again using supernovae. The found that the Universe was accelerating in its expansion, a conclusion that could most easily be explained if more than 70% of the Universe was some previously un-identified form of matter now often referred to as `Dark Energy'. Beyond their prominent role as tools to gauge our place in the Universe, supernovae themselves have been studied well over the past 75 years. We now know that there are two main physical causes of these cataclysmic events. One of these channels is the collapse of the core of a massive star. The observationally motivated classes Type II, Type Ib and Type Ic have been attributed to these events. This thesis, however is dedicated to the second group of supernovae, the thermonuclear explosions of degenerate carbon and oxygen rich material and lacking hydrogen - called Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). White dwarf stars are formed at the end of a typical star's life when nuclear burning ceases in the core, the outer envelope is ejected, with the degenerate core typically cooling for eternity. Theory predicts that such stars will self ignite when close to 1.38 Msun (called the Chandrasekhar Mass). Most stars however leave white dwarfs with 0.6 Msun, and no star leaves a remnant as heavy as 1.38 Msun, which suggests that they somehow need to acquire mass if they are to explode as SN Ia. Currently there are two major scenarios for this mass acquisition. In the favoured single degenerate scenario the white dwarf accretes matter from a companion star which is much younger in its evolutionary state. The less favoured double degenerate scenario sees the merger of two white dwarfs (with a total combined mass of more than 1.38 Msun). This thesis has tried to answer the question about the mass acquisition in two ways. First the single degenerate scenario predicts a surviving companion post-explosion. We undertook an observational campaign to find this companion in two ancient supernovae (SN 1572 and SN 1006). Secondly, we have extended an existing code to extract the elemental and energy yields of SNe Ia spectra by automating spectra fitting to specific SNe Ia. This type of analysis, in turn, help diagnose to which of the two major progenitor scenarios is right.en_AU
dc.identifier.otherb26388340
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/10267
dc.language.isoen_AUen_AU
dc.subjectsupernovaeen_AU
dc.subjectsupernova remnantsen_AU
dc.subjectsupernova spectroscopyen_AU
dc.titleType Ia supernovae: explosions and progenitorsen_AU
dc.typeThesis (PhD)en_AU
dcterms.valid2011en_AU
local.contributor.affiliationResearch School of Astronomy and Astrophysicsen_AU
local.contributor.supervisorSchmidt, Brian P.
local.description.notesSupervisor: Brian P. Schmidt, Supervisor's Email Address: brian@mso.anu.edu.auen_AU
local.description.refereedYesen_AU
local.identifier.doi10.25911/5d78d6c48f314
local.mintdoimint
local.type.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_AU

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