GeminiFocus April 2013 | Page 9

The outstanding question remained: “What is this object?” Director’s Discretionary Time enabled spectroscopy with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini South to provide an answer, and more. Luhman classified the object as an L8 dwarf, showing good agreement with a template spectrum. For ages less than 10 billion years, the temperature is well below that of the hydrogen burning limit. Also, considering the strong lithium absorption, Luhman concludes that the object is a brown dwarf. As an unexpected bonus, the acquisition image resolved the source into two components (Figure1). The pair, separated by 1.5 arcseconds, corresponds to 3 astronomical units at the object’s determined distance. Examination of earlier, archival images does not show either source at their present location, arguing that they form a common binary system. The secondary is only about half a magnitude fainter than the primary, which suggests that it is also a brown dwarf and near the L/T spectral class transition. Brown dwarf models are sensitive to age, so a binary system offers robust tests of models and potentially strong constraints on mass, assuming the objects formed at the same time. The GMOS observations were obtained on February 23, 2013, and the full paper will appear in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. A preprint is available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/1303.2401, as is more information from http://www.gemini.edu/node/11966. Light Echoes Show the Asymmetric Explosion of SN1987A Observations of light echoes — reflections of a transient event in the surrounding material — allow astronomers to change perspective. Rather than being effectively fixed April2013 Figure 2. Difference image shows SN1987A light echoes as positive and negative (bright and dark) circular rings. They appear uniformly circular because the echo is reflected off sheet-like dust structures. Black boxes mark the GMOS fields, and red points show the spectral locations. to a viewpoint on Earth, light echoes reveal the source object from a variety of viewing angles. Brendan Sinnott (McMaster University) and colleagues used light echoes from supernova 1987A (SN1987A) to conclude that this Type II event was asymmetric, with an elongated 56Ni structure. The strongest asymmetry they measure is in the Ha line, and this asymmetry aligns well with the observed axis of ejecta. The five fields the team observed with GMOS on Gemini South probe the supernova emission over its first 300 days. Figure 2 shows the prominent light echos, which appear as nearly circular rings, along with the slit positions on the GMOS fields. Variations in spectra obtained at different locations alone do not imply asymmetry in the supernova emission. The source spectrum itself changes, so the reflected light depends not only on the dust properties and its distribution but also on the exact region observed. The echo spectra must be compared to an appropriate isotropic source model, which is based on the original SN1987A outburst observations. The well-known source spectrum (SN1987A) is advantageous, then, because it provides an excellent reference for isotropic emission scenarios. The Ha line shows some of the strongest deviations from the isotropic assumption (Fig- GeminiFocus 9