Astro2020 Science White Paper: Are Supernovae the Dust Producer in the Early Universe?

Whether supernovae are a significant source of dust has been a long-standing debate. The large quantities of dust observed in high-redshift galaxies raise a fundamental question as to the origin of dust in the Universe since stars cannot have evolved to the AGB dust-producing phase in high-redshift...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2019-04
Hauptverfasser: Rho, Jeonghee, Milisavljevic, Danny, Sarangi, Arkaprabha, Margutti, Raffaella, Ryan Chornock, Rest, Armin, Graham, Melissa, Wheeler, J Craig, DePoy, Darren, Wang, Lifan, Marshall, Jennifer, Williams, Grant, Street, Rachel, Skidmore, Warren, Yan Haojing, Bloom, Joshua, Sumner Starrfield, Lee, Chien-Hsiu, Cowperthwaite, Philip S, Stringfellow, Guy S, Coppejans, Deanne, Terreran, Giacomo, Sravan, Niharika, Geballe, Thomas R, Evans, Aneurin, Howie, Marion
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Whether supernovae are a significant source of dust has been a long-standing debate. The large quantities of dust observed in high-redshift galaxies raise a fundamental question as to the origin of dust in the Universe since stars cannot have evolved to the AGB dust-producing phase in high-redshift galaxies. In contrast, supernovae occur within several millions of years after the onset of star formation. This white paper focuses on dust formation in supernova ejecta with US-Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) perspective during the era of JWST and LSST.
ISSN:2331-8422