GeminiFocus April 2016 | Page 5

Jennifer Andrews Dusting the Universe with Supernovae Figure 1. Long-term observations made with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at Gemini South, combined with Spitzer space telescope data, reveal how core collapse supernovae can make an important, yet largely unrecognized, contribution to the overall dust budget of the Universe. GMOS-S g’, r’, and i’ color composite image of SN 2011ja from April 2012 (day 112). In the original image, the supernova looks red due to a combination of bright hydrogen (Hα) emission, strong extinction around the object, and new dust formation. Stars more than eight times the mass of our Sun end their lives in fantastic explosions we call core collapse supernovae (CCSNe). Most common are Type II-Plateau (Type II-P) events, which show broad hydrogen emission lines in their spectra along with a near constant plateau of optical luminosity throughout the first ~100 days. It has long been known that heavy elements and dust grains can be formed in the leftover material ejected in a CCSN explosion. However, only recently have we recognized the importance of this contribution to the overall dust budget in the Universe. Generally we thought that asymptotic giant branch stars were the main contributors of dust in galaxies; these low- to intermediate-mass stars form dust grains in their stellar winds over millennia and deposit them into the interstellar medium (ISM). But this does not explain how high-redshift galaxies (z > 6) can have more dust than their young ages should allow. Thus we began to revisit the role that CCSNe play in dust production, especially their ability to quickly return gas and dust to the ISM. April 2016 GeminiFocus 3