756 research outputs found
International Law And Anti-Personnel Land Mines
The Convention on Conventional Weapons was adopted in 1980 to limit the use of conventional weapons that present special risks of causing unnecessary suffering or indiscriminate effects. The Convention currently contains three Protocols, each of which regulates the use of a specific type of weapon
Asil International Law Weekend: Panel On Internal Conflicts
As John Crook has pointed out, most of the armed conflicts of recent years have been internal rather than international, and most of the suffering of the civilian population has occurred in these internal conflict
Systematic Blueshift of Line Profiles in the Type IIn Supernova 2010jl: Evidence for Post-Shock Dust Formation?
Type IIn SNe show spectral evidence for strong interaction between their
blast wave and dense circumstellar material (CSM) around the progenitor star.
SN2010jl was the brightest core-collapse SN in 2010, and it was a Type IIn
explosion with strong CSM interaction. Andrews et al. recently reported
evidence for an IR excess in SN2010jl, indicating either new dust formation or
the heating of CSM dust in an IR echo. Here we report multi-epoch spectra of
SN2010jl that reveal the tell-tale signature of new dust formation:
emission-line profiles becoming systematically more blueshifted as the red side
of the line is blocked by increasing extinction. The effect is seen clearly in
the intermediate-width (400--4000 km/s) component of H beginning
roughly 30d after explosion. Moreover, we present near-IR spectra demonstrating
that the asymmetry in the hydrogen-line profiles is wavelength dependent,
appearing more pronounced at shorter wavelengths. This evidence suggests that
new dust grains had formed quickly in the post-shock shell of SN 2010jl arising
from CSM interaction. Since the observed dust temperature has been attributed
to an IR echo and not to new dust, either (1) IR excess emission at m is not a particularly sensitive tracer of new dust formation in SNe, or
(2) some assumptions about expected dust temperatures might require further
study. Lastly, we discuss one possible mechanism other than dust that might
lead to increasingly blueshifted line profiles in SNeIIn, although the
wavelength dependence of the asymmetry argues against this hypothesis in the
case of SN2010jl.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to A
The Type Ic Supernova 1994I in M51: Detection of Helium and Spectral Evolution
We present a series of spectra of SN 1994I in M51, starting 1 week prior to maximum brightness. The nebular phase began about 2 months after the explosion; together with the rapid decline of the optical light, this suggests that the ejected mass was small. Although lines of He I in the optical region are weak or absent, consistent with the Type Ic classification, we detect strong He I λ10830 absorption during the first month past maximum. Thus, if SN 1994I is a typical Type Ic supernova, the atmospheres of these objects cannot be completely devoid of helium. The emission-line widths are smaller than predicted by the model of Nomoto and coworkers, in which the iron core of a low-mass carbon-oxygen star collapses. They are, however, larger than in Type Ib supernovae
UBVRI Light Curves of 44 Type Ia Supernovae
We present UBVRI photometry of 44 type-Ia supernovae (SN Ia) observed from
1997 to 2001 as part of a continuing monitoring campaign at the Fred Lawrence
Whipple Observatory of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. The
data set comprises 2190 observations and is the largest homogeneously observed
and reduced sample of SN Ia to date, nearly doubling the number of
well-observed, nearby SN Ia with published multicolor CCD light curves. The
large sample of U-band photometry is a unique addition, with important
connections to SN Ia observed at high redshift. The decline rate of SN Ia
U-band light curves correlates well with the decline rate in other bands, as
does the U-B color at maximum light. However, the U-band peak magnitudes show
an increased dispersion relative to other bands even after accounting for
extinction and decline rate, amounting to an additional ~40% intrinsic scatter
compared to B-band.Comment: 84 authors, 71 pages, 51 tables, 10 figures. Accepted for publication
in the Astronomical Journal. Version with high-res figures and electronic
data at http://astron.berkeley.edu/~saurabh/cfa2snIa
First-Year Spectroscopy for the SDSS-II Supernova Survey
This paper presents spectroscopy of supernovae discovered in the first season
of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey. This program searches for
and measures multi-band light curves of supernovae in the redshift range z =
0.05 - 0.4, complementing existing surveys at lower and higher redshifts. Our
goal is to better characterize the supernova population, with a particular
focus on SNe Ia, improving their utility as cosmological distance indicators
and as probes of dark energy. Our supernova spectroscopy program features
rapid-response observations using telescopes of a range of apertures, and
provides confirmation of the supernova and host-galaxy types as well as precise
redshifts. We describe here the target identification and prioritization, data
reduction, redshift measurement, and classification of 129 SNe Ia, 16
spectroscopically probable SNe Ia, 7 SNe Ib/c, and 11 SNe II from the first
season. We also describe our efforts to measure and remove the substantial host
galaxy contamination existing in the majority of our SN spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal(47pages, 9
figures
Using Line Profiles to Test the Fraternity of Type Ia Supernovae at High and Low Redshifts
Using archival data of low-redshift (z < 0.01) Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) and
recent observations of high-redshift (0.16 < z <0.64; Matheson et al. 2005) SN
Ia, we study the "uniformity'' of the spectroscopic properties of nearby and
distant SN Ia. We find no difference in the measures we describe here. In this
paper, we base our analysis solely on line-profile morphology, focusing on
measurements of the velocity location of maximum absorption (vabs) and peak
emission (vpeak). We find that the evolution of vabs and vpeak for our sample
lines (Ca II 3945, Si II 6355, and S II 5454, 5640) is similar for both the
low- and high-redshift samples. We find that vabs for the weak S II 5454, 5640
lines, and vpeak for S II 5454, can be used to identify fast-declining [dm15 >
1.7] SN Ia, which are also subluminous. In addition, we give the first direct
evidence in two high-z SN Ia spectra of a double-absorption feature in Ca II
3945, an event also observed, though infrequently, in low-redshift SN Ia
spectra (6/22 SN Ia in our local sample). We report for the first time the
unambiguous and systematic intrinsic blueshift of peak emission of optical
P-Cygni line profiles in Type Ia spectra, by as much as 8000 km/s. All the
high-z SN Ia analyzed in this paper were discovered and followed up by the
ESSENCE collaboration, and are now publicly available.Comment: 28 pages (emulateapj), 15 figures; accepted for publication in A
Multi-Messenger Astronomy with Extremely Large Telescopes
The field of time-domain astrophysics has entered the era of Multi-messenger
Astronomy (MMA). One key science goal for the next decade (and beyond) will be
to characterize gravitational wave (GW) and neutrino sources using the next
generation of Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs). These studies will have a
broad impact across astrophysics, informing our knowledge of the production and
enrichment history of the heaviest chemical elements, constrain the dense
matter equation of state, provide independent constraints on cosmology,
increase our understanding of particle acceleration in shocks and jets, and
study the lives of black holes in the universe. Future GW detectors will
greatly improve their sensitivity during the coming decade, as will
near-infrared telescopes capable of independently finding kilonovae from
neutron star mergers. However, the electromagnetic counterparts to
high-frequency (LIGO/Virgo band) GW sources will be distant and faint and thus
demand ELT capabilities for characterization. ELTs will be important and
necessary contributors to an advanced and complete multi-messenger network.Comment: White paper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Surve
23 High Redshift Supernovae from the IfA Deep Survey: Doubling the SN Sample at z>0.7
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of 23 high redshift
supernovae spanning a range of z=0.34-1.03, 9 of which are unambiguously
classified as Type Ia. These supernovae were discovered during the IfA Deep
Survey, which began in September 2001 and observed a total of 2.5 square
degrees to a depth of approximately m=25-26 in RIZ over 9-17 visits, typically
every 1-3 weeks for nearly 5 months, with additional observations continuing
until April 2002. We give a brief description of the survey motivations,
observational strategy, and reduction process. This sample of 23 high-redshift
supernovae includes 15 at z>0.7, doubling the published number of objects at
these redshifts, and indicates that the evidence for acceleration of the
universe is not due to a systematic effect proportional to redshift. In
combination with the recent compilation of Tonry et al. (2003), we calculate
cosmological parameter density contours which are consistent with the flat
universe indicated by the CMB (Spergel et al. 2003). Adopting the constraint
that Omega_total = 1.0, we obtain best-fit values of (Omega_m,
Omega_Lambda)=(0.33, 0.67) using 22 SNe from this survey augmented by the
literature compilation. We show that using the empty-beam model for
gravitational lensing does not eliminate the need for Omega_Lambda > 0.
Experience from this survey indicates great potential for similar large-scale
surveys while also revealing the limitations of performing surveys for z>1 SNe
from the ground.Comment: 67 pages, 12 figures, 12 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
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