TY - CONF AU - Andrew Hamilton AU - R. Fesen AU - S. Woosley AB -
The recent discovery by Fesen et al. [1] of the remnant of S Andromedae, the historic supernova of 1885 observed a mere 16\textacutedbl from the nuclear center of M31, brings to two the number of supernovae whose ejecta have been observed successfully in absorption: SN 1006 (Type Ia; Wu et al. [2]; Fesen et al. [3]; Hamilton and Fesen [4]) and now SN 1885 (Type I peculiar; de Vaucouleurs and Corwin [5]). In the discovery image, SN 1885 appears as an unresolved spot of Fe I absorption silhouetted against the starry blaze of M31 s bulge. From the observed absorption contrast, Fesen et al. [1] estimate that SN 1885 has an Fe I diameter of 0.3\textacutedbl, corresponding to an expansion velocity of \textpm5,000 km s—1.
CY - New York, NY DA - 1991-01 DO - 10.1007/978-1-4612-2988-9_97 N2 -The recent discovery by Fesen et al. [1] of the remnant of S Andromedae, the historic supernova of 1885 observed a mere 16\textacutedbl from the nuclear center of M31, brings to two the number of supernovae whose ejecta have been observed successfully in absorption: SN 1006 (Type Ia; Wu et al. [2]; Fesen et al. [3]; Hamilton and Fesen [4]) and now SN 1885 (Type I peculiar; de Vaucouleurs and Corwin [5]). In the discovery image, SN 1885 appears as an unresolved spot of Fe I absorption silhouetted against the starry blaze of M31 s bulge. From the observed absorption contrast, Fesen et al. [1] estimate that SN 1885 has an Fe I diameter of 0.3\textacutedbl, corresponding to an expansion velocity of \textpm5,000 km s—1.
PB - Springer New York PP - New York, NY PY - 1991 SN - 978-1-4612-2988-9 SP - 656 EP - 660 TI - Photoionization Models of Iron-Rich Ejecta in SN 1885 ER -