The locations of recent supernovae near the Sun from modelling 60Fe transport


Autoria(s): Breitschwerdt, Dieter; Feige, Jenny; Schulreich, Michael; Avillez, Miguel
Data(s)

02/02/2017

02/02/2017

07/04/2016

Resumo

The signature of 60Fe in deep-sea crusts indicates that one or more supernovae exploded in the solar neighbourhood about 2.2 million years ago1–4. Recent isotopic analysis is consistent with a core-collapse or electron-capture supernova that occurred 60 to 130 parsecs from the Sun5. Moreover, peculiarities in the cosmic ray spectrum point to a nearby supernova about two million years ago6. The Local Bubble of hot, diffuse plasma, in which the Solar System is embedded, originated from 14 to 20 supernovae within a moving group, whose surviving members are now in the Scorpius– Centaurus stellar association7,8. Here we report calculations of the most probable trajectories and masses of the supernova progenitors, and hence their explosion times and sites. The 60Fe signal arises from two supernovae at distances between 90 and 100 parsecs. The closest occurred 2.3 million years ago at present-day galactic coordinates l = 327°, b = 11°, and the second-closest exploded about 1.5 million years ago at l = 343°, b = 25°, with masses of 9.2 and 8.8 times the solar mass, respectively. The remaining supernovae, which formed the Local Bubble, contribute to a smaller extent because they happened at larger distances and longer ago (60Fe has a half- life of 2.6 million years9,10). There are uncertainties relating to the nucleosynthesis yields and the loss of 60Fe during transport, but they do not influence the relative distribution of 60Fe in the crust layers, and therefore our model reproduces the measured relative abundances very well.

Identificador

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v532/n7597/full/nature17424.html

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20578

nd

nd

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mavillez@uevora.pt

343

10.1038/nature17424

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Nature

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Local Bubble #60Fe #Ferromanganese crust #supernovae
Tipo

article