GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review | Page 34

(unusually) the science instrument. Photometric measurements were recorded several times per second. Figure 7. Predicted track of Quaoar during an occultation attempt on August 5, 2013. This event was another “near-miss” at Gemini South. One of the challenges of these observations is that the catalogued positions of many of the stars are not sufficiently precise to predict an occultation with certainty. The team uses observations from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) Legacy Survey to make the predictions of upcoming occultations, and then they only observe events that have the highest probability of being successful. Despite these efforts, to date no occultation event of the large (1000-kilometer-diameter) Quaoar has been observed. Nonetheless, as previously mentioned, full analysis of the observations obtained on July 13, 2013, at Gemini South set useful limits on the atmosphere. References: Fraser, W., et al., The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 774: L18, 2013 Fraser, W., et al., The Publication of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 125: 1000, 2013 July 2013 Figure 8. Images of the SN 2007gr environment extracted from the integral field unit observations corresponding to Ha and V band. A green circle marks the supernova host star cluster, and other nearby star clusters (SC-B, etc.) are noted. 32 Mass, Metallicity, and History of Supernova Progenitors laborators determine the properties of supernova progenitors through observations of the stellar population at the host sites. This study concentrates on the local environments of Type Ib and Ic supernovae — those that do not show hydrogen in their spectra and likely result from the core collapse of massive stars, specifically, Wolf-Rayet stars. Strong stellar winds or mass loss to a companion could strip the outer hydrogen layers of a progenitor. Indeed, the team generally found the Type Ic supernovae in more metal-rich environments than the Type Ibs. Furthermore, both types have higher metallicity than Type II supernovae, which are also due to core collapse of massive stars but have retained their hydrogen shells. The higher metallicity would promote mass loss through stellar winds. Another difference between the Types Ib and Ic is that the latter are generally younger, implying more massive stellar progenitors. Some of the progenitors of both types are less massive than about 25 times the Sun’s mass and thus not massive enough to be stripped Wolf-Rayet stars. T \