Title: Exploding stars
1Exploding stars
- And the modeling of
- Dwarf galaxies
http//www.spacetoday.org/images/DeepSpace/Stars/S
tarWR124Hubble.jpg
2Dwarf Galaxies
- What are they?
- Where are they?
- Why are we interested in them?
3Dwarf galaxy
Ultra Faint DG
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a7/Phoe
nix_Dwarf.jpg
4Dwarf Galaxies
- What are they?
- Where are they?
- Why are we interested in them?
5http//www.sciencecentric.com/images/news/map_milk
y_way_1000_1000.jpg
6Dwarf Galaxies
- What are they?
- Where are they?
- Why are we interested in them?
7Ultra Faint DGs
- Very recent discovery 2005
- Low luminosity and metallicity
- Extreme darkbaryonic matter ratio
- Remnants of early structures in galaxy formation
- Closely linked to the first stars (pop III)
- Chemical Tagging provides valuable information
about the nature of these galaxies
Black dots Milky Way stars Blue squares DG
stars Red stars Ultra faint DG stars
8Modeling Supernova
SN 1987A NASA, ESA, P. Challis and R. Kirshner
(Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)
9Calculating mean yields
- Using data from papers by Nomoto et al, Woosley
et al and Chieffi et al. - Using sum of all isotopes for each element
- Mean yields where calculated using numerical
integration of
Linear interpolation of (yield of a particular
element) a M
Salpeter Initial Mass Function
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12SN Subroutine
- Part of a larger model of Dwarf Galaxy evolution
- Fortran subroutine to calculate yields of a
certain element for a specified mass and
metallicity, based on Nomoto SN/HN yields - Using bilinear interpolation on the tabulated
values
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14Conclusions
- The stellar models are sensitive to a range of
variables - Small changes in explosion energy and metallicity
influence yields - Abundances of odd elements are particularly
influenced by the metallicity of a star - a metallicity parameter and a HN/SN flag has been
incorporated into a new stellar yield subroutine
which will form part of a model of galactic
chemical evolution
15Acknowledgements and Refernces
- Special thank you Dr. Torgny Karlsson, for the
time he spent helping me learn some new physics. - Also thanks to Dick Hunstead for organizing the
projects. - References
- Nucleosynthesis Yields of Core-Collapse
Supernovae and Hypernovae, and Galactic Chemical
Evolution - Kenichi Nomoto, Nozomu Tominaga, Hideyuki
Umeda, Chiaki Kobayashi, Keiichi Maeda, - Nuclear Physics A (2006)
- NUCLEOSYNTHESIS AND EVOLUTION OF MASSIVE
METAL-FREE STARS - Alexander Heger, S. E. Woosley
- ApJ, March 21, 2008
- SN 1987A NASA, ESA, P. Challis and R. Kirshner
(Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) - http//www.sciencecentric.com/images/news/map_milk
y_way_1000_1000.jpg - http//www.spacetoday.org/images/DeepSpace/Stars/S
tarWR124Hubble.jpg
16Mixing Effects
Mixing effects for B1.2
Yield
17Current Supernova Models
- Simulations are missing 1051 ergs!
- (erg1 10-7 joules)
- To compensate for this missing energy
- thermal explosion
- piston
- enhanced neutrino opacity
- Mixing in the star
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20Whole bunch of reading
21Ultra Faint DGs
- Very recent discovery 2005
- Low luminosity and metallicity
- Extreme darkbaryonic matter ratio
- Closely linked to the first stars (pop III)
- Remnants of early structures in galaxy formation
- Chemical Tagging provides valuable information
about the nature of these galaxies
Black dots Milky Way stars Blue squares DG
stars Red squares Ultra faint DG stars