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Published February 20, 2014 | Supplemental Material + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Asymmetries in core-collapse supernovae from maps of radioactive ^(44)Ti in Cassiopeia A

Abstract

Asymmetry is required by most numerical simulations of stellar core-collapse explosions, but the form it takes differs significantly among models. The spatial distribution of radioactive ^(44)Ti, synthesized in an exploding star near the boundary between material falling back onto the collapsing core and that ejected into the surrounding medium, directly probes the explosion asymmetries. Cassiopeia A is a young, nearby, core-collapse remnant from which ^(44)Ti emission has previously been detected but not imaged. Asymmetries in the explosion have been indirectly inferred from a high ratio of observed ^(44)Ti emission to estimated ^(56)Ni emission, from optical light echoes, and from jet-like features seen in the X-ray and optical ejecta. Here we report spatial maps and spectral properties of the ^(44)Ti in Cassiopeia A. This may explain the unexpected lack of correlation between the ^(44)Ti and iron X-ray emission, the latter being visible only in shock-heated material. The observed spatial distribution rules out symmetric explosions even with a high level of convective mixing, as well as highly asymmetric bipolar explosions resulting from a fast-rotating progenitor. Instead, these observations provide strong evidence for the development of low-mode convective instabilities in core-collapse supernovae.

Additional Information

© 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. Received 27 August 2013. Accepted 13 December 2013. Published online 19 February 2014. This work was supported by NASA under grant no. NNG08FD60C, and made use of data from the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) mission, a project led by Caltech, managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and funded by NASA. We thank the NuSTAR operations, software and calibration teams for support with execution and analysis of these observations.

Attached Files

Submitted - 1403.4978v1.pdf

Supplemental Material - nature12997-sf1.jpg

Supplemental Material - nature12997-sf2.jpg

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Supplemental Material - nature12997-sf5.jpg

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Supplemental Material - nature12997-st2.jpg

Supplemental Material - nature12997-st3.jpg

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Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
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