2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2005.01.097
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Gamma-ray observations of explosive nucleosynthesis products

Abstract: In this review I discuss the various γ-ray emission lines that can be expected and, in some cases have been observed, from radioactive explosive nucleosynthesis products. The most important γ-ray lines result from the decay chains of 56 Ni, 57 Ni, and 44 Ti. 56 Ni is the prime explosive nucleosynthesis product of Type Ia supernovae, and its decay determines to a large extent the Type Ia light curves.56 Ni is also a product of core-collapse supernovae, and in fact, γ-ray line emission from its daughter product,… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Yet, Cas A seems an established 44 Ti detection in COMPTEL (Schönfelder et al 2000) and Beppo-Sax (Vink et al 2001) and INTEGRAL/IBIS (Vink 2005) measurements, while OSSE and RXTE (Rothschild & Lingenfelter 2003) measurements of Cas A were not sufficiently sensitive. There exist no wellunderstood supernova remnants other than Cas A where the 44 Ti production issue can be tested.…”
Section: Supernova Locationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, Cas A seems an established 44 Ti detection in COMPTEL (Schönfelder et al 2000) and Beppo-Sax (Vink et al 2001) and INTEGRAL/IBIS (Vink 2005) measurements, while OSSE and RXTE (Rothschild & Lingenfelter 2003) measurements of Cas A were not sufficiently sensitive. There exist no wellunderstood supernova remnants other than Cas A where the 44 Ti production issue can be tested.…”
Section: Supernova Locationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this paper these sources will not be addressed in detail; we refer to Vink (2005) and Renaud et al (2004) for more detailed studies. This paper presents results on compact hard X-ray sources detected in the deep 1.6-Ms observation of the Cassiopeia region.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cas A is believed to be the remnant of a core-collapse SN whose progenitor mass was in the range 22-25 M ⊙ (M ⊙ denotes a solar mass) [4]. Using known values of the distance and age of the remnant, half-life of 44 Ti and the combined γ flux from all observations, an initial 44 Ti yield of 160± 60 µM ⊙ is implied [3]. This value is larger by a factor of 2-10 than 44 Ti yields calculated in current models (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stellar production of 44 Ti determines the abundance of stable 44 Ca and contributes to that of 48 Ti (fed by 48 Cr on the α-chain). Live 44 Ti has been directly observed from a point source identified as Cassiopeia A (Cas A) by γ-and X-ray telescopes (CGRO, RXTE, BeppoSAX) and very recently by the INTEGRAL mission (see [2,3]). Cas A is believed to be the remnant of a core-collapse SN whose progenitor mass was in the range 22-25 M ⊙ (M ⊙ denotes a solar mass) [4].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%