GeminiFocus 2017 Year in Review | Page 43

the optical, SUNBIRD aims to uncover CCSNs that otherwise would remain hidden in the dusty, crowded star-forming regions within LIRGs. So far, in a relatively modest amount of telescope time, the project has discov- ered three CCSNs, and one other candidate, all of which are near the centers of intense star formation in LIRGs (Figure 4). This repre- sents a very high discovery rate compared to previous searches. The results indicate that the majority of CCSNs that explode in such galaxies have been missed as a result of dust obscuration and inadequate image quality. The work has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, and a preprint is available online. OCTOBER 2017 A Super-distant, Superluminous Supernova Observations conducted with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph on the 8-meter Gemini South telescope have confirmed that a brilliant explosion more than three times as bright as our Milky Way Galaxy is one of the most distant supernovae ever studied. The event, known as DES15E2mlf, occurred about 3.5 billion years after the Big Bang, at a period known as “cosmic high noon,” when the rate of star formation in the Universe had reached its peak. DES15E2mlf was initially detected in Novem- ber 2015 by the Dark Energy Survey (DES). Follow-up observations at Gemini South not only confirmed the object’s distance of 10 billion light years, but also revealed its unusual nature. Previous observations of superluminous supernovae show that they typically reside in low-mass or dwarf galax- ies, which tend to be less enriched in metals than more massive galaxies. However, Uni- versity of California Santa Cruz astronomers Yen-Chen Pan and Ryan Foley, who led the January 2018 / 2017 Year in Review Gemini investigation as part of an inter- national team of DES collaborators, found that the host galaxy of DES15E2mlf, is a fair- ly massive normal-looking galaxy, which goes counter to current thinking. While knowing that very massive stars were exploding at that time is important, the team would now like to know the rela- tive rate of superluminous supernovae to normal supernovae — to see if this atypi- cal supernova is telling us something spe- cial about that time 10 billion years ago. It may be that at these earlier times in the Universe’s history, even high-mass galax- ies, like our Milky Way, may have had a low enough metal content to create these ex- traordinary stellar explosions. Their findings appear in a paper published June 13th in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. New Class of Variable Stars Confirmed Astronomers using the Gemini Multi-Ob- ject Spectrograph (GMOS) on the Gemini South telescope have confirmed a new class of variable stars. Called Blue Large- Amplitude Pulsators (BLAPs), they are sig- nificantly bluer than main sequence stars of the same luminosity, demonstrating that they are relatively hot. Pawel Pietrukowicz (Warsaw University Observatory, Poland) led the Gemini study, following the team’s discovery of 14 candidate stars as part of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experi- ment (OGLE) — a variability sky survey con- ducted on the 1.3-meter Warsaw Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile. The team’s GMOS spectra on three of the candidate BLAPs confirmed that these stars are “low-mass giants” with helium-rich atmospheres and high surface tempera- tures of about 30,000 K, comparable with GeminiFocus 41