Download - Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

Transcript
Page 1: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

Stephen J. WilliamsNational Observatory of Athens

June 23, 2014 1

Page 2: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

Collaborators

Alceste Bonanos (NOA)Nikolay Britavskiy (NOA)

Michalis Kourniotis (NOA)Jose Prieto (Princeton)Andrea Mehner (ESO)

William Blair (JHU)Brad Whitmore (STScI)

2

Page 3: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

SN2009ip

3Mauerhan et al. 2013LBV Variability

LBV Outbursts

Page 4: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

4

Szcz

ygie

ł et a

l. 20

10

Page 5: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

5Ekström et al. 2012

Page 6: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

6

Page 7: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

7

Bonanos et al. 2009

Page 8: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

8

Khan et al. 2013

Page 9: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

9

Page 10: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

10Britavskiy et al. 2014

Page 11: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

Conclusions, Work to Do

• Pan-STARRS1 – Variability to ID evolved massive stars– Bandpass diagnostics

• Spectroscopic follow-up• Census of objects across metallicity• SN progenitor groundwork

11

Page 12: Dusty Massive Evolved Stars In the Nearby Universe

References

• Mauerhan et al. 2013, MNRAS, 430, 1801• Szczygieł et al. 2010, AJ, 140, 14• Ekström et al. 2012, A&A, 537, 146• Bonanos et al. 2009, AJ, 138, 1003• Khan et al. 2013, ApJ, 767, 52• Britavskiy et al. 2014, A&A, 562, 75

12