Watch the summary of the main results of my team in the Luminous Infrared Galaxy Arp 299-A, where we have found an extremely prolific factory of massive (more than eight solar masses) stars. The movie spans about two and a half years of observations with the European VLBI Network (EVN), at a wavelength of 6 cm, reaching milliarcsecond angular resolution (corresponding to about 1.5 pc linear resolution at the distance of Arp 299-A (D=44.8 Mpc). We are witnessing their death right now, at a rate of about 1 supernova year, which puts into trouble standard wisdom about converting far-infrared luminosity into supernova rates. Further, we also discovered the exact location of the supermassive black hole (A1 in the movie) in the nucleus of Arp 299-A. Very interestingly, a supernova that popped-off in 2003 (A0 in the movie) is just 2 pc away from the galaxy monster, showing the existence of a rather peaceful relationship between the AGN and the powerful starburst, which is concetrated in the innermost ~100 pc.
The central kiloparsec of many local luminous infrared galaxies are known to
host intense bursts of massive star formation, leading to numerous explosions of
core-collapse supernovae. However, the dust-enshrouded regions where those supernovae
explode hamper their detection at optical and near-infrared wavelengths.
We investigated the nuclear region of the starburst galaxy IC 694 (=Arp
299-A) at radio wavelengths, aimed at discovering recently exploded core-collapse
supernovae, as well as determining their rate of explosion, which carries crucial
information about star formation rates, the initial mass function, and the starburst
processes in action.
We used the electronic European VLBI Network (eEVN) to image with
milliarcsecond resolution the 5.0 GHz compact radio emission of the innermost
nuclear region of IC 694. Our observations
detected a rich cluster of 26 compact radio emitting sources in the central
150 pc of the nuclear
starburst in IC 694. The high brightness temperatures observed for the
compact sources are
indicative of a non-thermal origin for the observed radio emission, implying
that most, if not
all, of those sources are young radio supernovae and supernova remnants. We
found evidence of at
least three relatively young, slowly evolving, long-lasting radio supernovae
(A0, A12, and A15 in
the image) that appear to have unusual CCSN properties, suggesting that the
conditions in the
local circumstellar medium (CSM) play a significant role in determining the
radio behaviour of
expanding SNe. Their radio luminosities are typical of normal RSNe, which
result from the
explosion of type IIP/b and type IIL SNe. All of these results provide
support for a recent (less
than 10-15 Myr) instantaneous starburst in the innermost regions of IC 694,
and confirm that the
inner regions of Arp 299-A are an extremely prolific supernova factory.
The above results appeared published as a Letter to A&A (A&A, 507, L17) in
November 2009 and are
part of a three-year long monitoring of Arp 299-A, using both the full EVN,
as well as the eEVN,
aimed at directly determining the core-collapse supernova of the galaxy
- model independently -
and testing the standard far infra-red/core-collapse supernovae
relationships.
Authors:
Miguel A. Perez-Torres (1), Cristina Romero-Canizales (1), Antxon
Alberdi (1), Antonis
Polatidis(2,3) (2008, A&A, 507, L17) Caption:
Top: 5 GHz VLA archival observations of Arp 299 on 24 October 2000,
displaying the five brightest knots of radio emission in this merging galaxy. Middle and bottom:
contour maps drawn at five times the rms of our 5 GHz eEVN observations of the central 500
light years of the luminous infrared galaxy Arp 299-A on 8 April 2008 and 5 December 2008,
revealing a large population of relatively bright, compact, non-thermal emitting sources. The
size of the FWHM synthesized interferometric beam was (0.6 arcsec x 0.4
arcsec) for the VLA observations, and (7.3 milliarcsec x 6.3 milliarcsec) and (8.6
milliarcsec x 8.4 milliarcsec) for the EVN observations on 8 April 2008 and 5 December
2008, respectively. To guide the reader's eye, we show in cyan the components detected only at
the 5 December 2008 epoch. The attained off-source root-mean-square (rms) noise level was 39
microJy/beam and 24 microJy/beam for the 8 April 2008 and 5 December 2008 observations,
respectively, and enables 26 compact components to be detected above 5 rms. The peak of brightness in
the images is of ~900 microJy/beam, corresponding to component A1 at both epochs.
Within the constellation of Ursa Major, at a distance of 44 Mpc lies the
luminous infrared
galaxy Arp 299, which is the result of the merging of two galaxies, IC 694
(also known as Arp
299-A) and NGC 3690 (=Arp 299-B1).
The large far-infrared luminosity of Arp 299-A, which accounts for about 50%
of the total in
Arp 299, should result in about 1 SN/yr if standard relations between
far-infrared luminosity
and core-collapse supernova (CCSN) rates hold.
We observed Arp 299-A with the eEVN in 2008, and found indeed a large number
of compact
sources in its inner 150 pc, most likely young CCSNe and supernova remnants
(SNRs) (see EVN Newsletter No. 25
and Perez-Torres et al. 2009, A&A, 507, L17). We
therefore requested
further observations, this time using the full-EVN at 1.7 and 5.0 GHz, to
characterize the
nature of all these compact sources and with the final aim of determining
the core-collapse
supernova rate for this galaxy after a three-year long monitoring.
Fig. 1 shows an "spin-off" result from these observations. The top panel
shows the inner 150
pc region of Arp 299-A as imaged with the full EVN at 5.0 GHz, with all the
white blobs being
the compact sources we wanted to characterize. What caught our interest was
the line of
objects toward the top right of this image (the A1-A5 region). This was not
a chance
alignment, but could either be a chain of supernovae and SNRs in a super
star cluster
approximately 500 years old, or a core and jet of a hidden AGN. The chances
that the objects
belong to such superstar cluster are less than 3 in a million, and therefore
we ruled out this
possibility. On the other hand, the morphology, radio luminosity, spectral
index and ratio of
radio-to-X-ray emission of the A1~VA5 region are consistent with a
low-luminosity AGN (LLAGN).
We therefore identified the A1~VA5 region with the long-sought AGN in Arp
299-A.
Interestingly, the object labelled A0 is not part of the AGN. Actually, it
is a supernova
discovered in 2004 by Neff and collaborators. At a mere projected distance
of less than 2 pc
from the AGN, it is one of the closest to a central supermassive black hole
ever detected. And
we hypothesize that this vicinity of massive stars could be the reason why
Arp 299-A AGN is so
weak ~V nearby massive stars heating their surroundings and dispelling the
material that it
would normally accrete.
Full details can be found in A&A (
Perez-Torres et al. 2010, A&A, 519, L5),
where our Figure is
one of the three highlights for the Vol. 519 of the September 2010 issue.
Authors:
Miguel A. Perez-Torres, Antonio Alberdi, Cristina Romero-Canizales
(IAA-CSIC,Granada, Spain), and Marco Bondi (IRA-INAF, Bologna, Italy)
Arp299-A is a luminous infrared galaxies at a distance of 45 Mpc hosting
recent and intense star-forming activity as indicated by the relatively high
frequency of supernovae (SNe) discovered at optical and near-infrared (NIR)
wavelengths in its outer, less extinguished, regions.
The innermost 150 pc nuclear region of Arp299-A is so dusty that even NIR
observations will miss a significant fraction of SNe. Only VLBI observations
couple the necessary angular resolution and high sensitivity to detect new
radio SNe, i.e. core-collapse SNe, allowing to measure the SN rate directly and
indipendently of models.
Figure. EVN image at 5 GHz of Arp299-A obtained by stacking all six
epochs. The resolution is (10 x 8) mas. The peak is 907 microJy/beam
and the 1-sigma sensitivity is 18.5 microJy/beam.
The EVN has been monitoring Arp299-A at 6 cm with one observation every 6 months since April 2008, and
partial results have been published in Perez-Torres et al. (Letters to A&A, 2009; see also EVN Newsletter
No. 25 - Jan 2010) and Perez-Torres et al. (Letters to A&A, 2010; see also EVN Newsletter No. 28 - Jan
2011). The outcome of the first 6 epochs of observations is illustrated in Figure 1, which shows the EVN
image at 5 GHz of Arp299-A obtained stacking all six epochs, the deepest image ever of Arp 299-A at this
frequency. The image has a resolution of (10 x 8 mas; i.e. 2.2 x 1.7 pc) and a 1-sigma sensitivity of
18.5 microJy/beam. Twenty-six compact sources are detected in a region of about (150 x 110) pc, eight of
which are new objects. The radio luminosity, time variability behaviour and spectral index (derived using
previous observations) of the compact objects are consistent with them being a mixed population of
core-collapse SNe and supernova remnants (SNR). We find clear evidence for at least two new CCSNe in less
than two years, implying a lower limit to the CCSNe rate in the nuclear region of Arp 299-A of 0.80
SN/yr. This value is essentially the CCSN rate expected for the whole Arp 299-A galaxy, indicating that
most of the SN activity is taking place in a very compact, nuclear starburst, as previously suggested by
us. The monitoring of Arp 299-A using the e-EVN and the full EVN is currently underway and more
spectacular results from this supernova factory are expected.
Authors: Marco Bondi (INAF-IRA), Miguel Perez-Torres (IAA-CSIC), Ruben Herrero-Illana
(IAA-CSIC), Antonio Alberdi (IAA-CSIC)
Reference: Bondi
et al. 2012, A & A, 539, 134.
An extremely prolific supernova factory in the buried nucleus of the
starburst galaxy IC694
1 Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (IAA-CSIC), Granada, Spain
2 ASTRON, Dwingeloo, The Netherlands
3 JIVE, Dwingeloo, The Netherlands
3. EVN
Scientific Highlights
Serendipitous discovery of the long-sought AGN in Arp 299-A
3. EVN
Scientific Highlights
Multi-epoch EVN observations of Arp299-A