2005 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 16–19, 2005;
Tampa, FL
Session U3: Dark Energy I
3:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Monday, April 18, 2005
Marriott Tampa Waterside
Room: Grand Salon A/B
Sponsoring
Units:
DAP DPF
Chair: Wendy Freedman, Carnegie Observatories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.APR.U3.3
Abstract: U3.00003 : Type Ia Supernovae: Explosion Models versus Observational Constraints
4:42 PM–5:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
David Branch
(University of Oklahoma)
To have confidence in using Type~Ia supernovae (SNe~Ia) to
determine the expansion history of the universe, and thereby
probe the nature of the dark energy, we must advance our
understanding of SN~Ia physics. In the standard model a
carbon--oxygen white dwarf accretes matter from a companion
star,
approaches the Chandrasekhar mass, ignites carbon fusion,
encounters a thermonuclear instability, and explodes completely.
The final kinetic energy of the ejected matter is the energy
released by fusion minus the white--dwarf binding energy. The
kinetic energy inferred from observations indicates that
practically the whole white dwarf undergoes fusion. The peak
luminosity depends on the mass of freshly synthesized $^{56}$Ni,
which provides a delayed release of energy while decaying
through
$^{56}$Co to stable $^{56}$Fe. The observed SN~Ia luminosity
requires that nearly half of the mass is synthesized to
$^{56}$Ni. Spectroscopic observations indicate that the
composition structure of the ejected matter is radially
stratified, with a core of iron--group elements surrounded by
lighter elements such as calcium, silicon, and oxygen.
Spherically symmetric (1D) nuclear-hydrodynamical explosion
models that meet these requirements have been calculated, by
parameterizing the velocity of the burning front. In recent
years more self--consistent 3D models have been calculated.
Deflagration models, in which the burning front remains
subsonic,
undergo insufficient fusion and lack the stratified composition
structure. Delayed--detonation models, which invoke a
transition
to supersonic front propagation, fare better, although it is not
known whether the transition really can occur. I will discuss
the status of explosion models versus observational constraints
(mostly spectroscopic), and the challenging task of relating the
various observational manifestations of SN~Ia diversity to their
physical causes.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.APR.U3.3