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view Abstract Citations (210) References (83) Co-Reads Similar Papers Volume Content Graphics Metrics Export Citation NASA/ADS Airborne Spectrophotometry of SN 1987A from 1.7 to 12.6 Microns: Time History of the Dust Continuum and Line Emission Wooden, Diane H. ; Rank, David M. ; Bregman, Jesse D. ; Witteborn, Fred C. ; Tielens, A. G. G. M. ; Cohen, Martin ; Pinto, Philip A. ; Axelrod, Timothy S. Abstract Spectrophotometric observations (1.7-12.6 microns) of SN 1987A from the Kuiper Airborne Observatory are presented for five epochs at 60, 260, 415, 615, and 775 days after the explosion. A variety of emission lines is seen, including members of the hydrogen Humphreys, Pfund, Brackett, and Paschen series, fine-structure lines of metals (including [Ni II] 6.634 microns, [Ni I] 7.507 microns, [Ar II] 6.985 microns, and [Co II] 10.521 microns), and CO and SiO molecular bands. The temporal evolution of the seven strongest H lines follows case C recombination theory and yields large values of τ(Hα) at 260 and 415 days. A mass of ~2 X 10^-3^ M_sun_ is derived for stable nickel, and the ratio of the [Ni I] 7.507 micron and [Ni II] 6.634 micron line intensities yields a high ionization fraction of 0.9 in the nickel zone. Dust condensation is clearly detected at 615 days for the first time in a Type II supernova. At no time is there a 9.7 micron emission feature characteristic of interstellar astronomical silicates in the spectra of SN 1987A, nor are the 6.2 or 7.7 micron emission features attributed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons seen. These airborne data are combined with other airborne and ground-based measurements taken at (or near) the same time to form five composite spectra of SN 1987A with wavelength coverage from ~3200 A to 100 microns. The IR continuum emission between ~2 and 100 micron is compared with a three-component model-(1) hot photospheric continuum, (2) free-free and free-bound H emission, and (3) dust continuum-with the best fit determined using a nonlinear x^2^ method. The dust continuum component is well characterized by a single-temperature graybody emission spectrum, i.e., by the radiation from gray grains or dust in optically thick clumps. At early times (less than 400 days after core collapse), the dust emission tracks the bolometric luminosity at about the 2% level. By 615 days, the fraction of the total luminosity contributed by the IR dust continuum increases dramatically to 0.45, and then to 0.83 at 775 days. We suggest that this dichotomy in the temporal evolution of the dust emission arises from dust with different origins. Circumstellar dust present before the supernova and then heated by it may account for the early emission. Newly condensed dust in the ejecta accounts for the later emission. A lower limit to the dust mass at 775 days is ~10^-4^ M_sun_, but much more dust could be present. Since the emission is well fitted by a graybody, no information on the dust composition can be directly discerned from our data. Publication: The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series Pub Date: October 1993 DOI: 10.1086/191830 Bibcode: 1993ApJS...88..477W Keywords: Airborne Equipment; Infrared Stars; Line Spectra; Spectral Energy Distribution; Stellar Spectrophotometry; Supernova 1987a; Argon; Calibrating; Carbon Monoxide; Chlorine; Cobalt; Helium; Hydrogen; Iron; Nickel; Sodium; Wavelengths; Astronomy full text sources ADS | data products SIMBAD (9) NED (2)