4.6 Review

Are 44Ti-producing supernovae exceptional?

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 450, Issue 3, Pages 1037-U133

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054626

Keywords

ISM : abundances; Galaxy : abundances; gamma rays : observations; ISM : supernova remnants; supernovae : general; dust, extinction

Ask authors/readers for more resources

According to standard models supernovae produce radioactive Ti-44, which should be visible in gamma-rays following decay to Ca-44 for a few centuries. Ti-44 production is believed to be the source of cosmic Ca-44, whose abundance is well established. Yet, gamma-ray telescopes have not seen the expected young remnants of core collapse events. The Ti-44 mean life of tau similar or equal to 89 y and the Galactic supernova rate of similar or equal to 3/100 y imply similar or equal to several detectable Ti-44 gamma-ray sources, but only one is clearly seen, the 340-year-old Cas A SNR. Furthermore, supernovae which produce much 44Ti are expected to occur primarily in the inner part of the Galaxy, where young massive stars are most abundant. Because the Galaxy is transparent to gamma-rays, this should be the dominant location of expected gamma-ray sources. Yet the Cas A SNR as the only one source is located far from the inner Galaxy (at longitude 112 degrees). We evaluate the surprising absence of detectable supernovae from the past three centuries. We discuss whether our understanding of SN explosions, their Ti-44 yields, their spatial distributions, and statistical arguments can be stretched so that this apparent disagreement may be accommodated within reasonable expectations, or if we have to revise some or all of the above aspects to bring expectations in agreement with the observations. We conclude that either core collapse supernovae have been improbably rare in the Galaxy during the past few centuries, or Ti-44-producing supernovae are atypical supernovae. We also present a new argument based on Ca-44/Ca-40 ratios in mainstream SiC stardust grains that may cast doubt on massive-He-cap type I supernovae as the source of most galactic Ca-44.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available