Roger A. Chevalier
University of Virginia
288 Papers
3K Citations
Roger A. Chevalier is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supernova & Supernova remnant. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 284 publications. Previous affiliations of Roger A. Chevalier include Kitt Peak National Observatory & Advanced Technology Center.
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Papers
•Posted Content
Relativistic ejecta from XRF 060218 and the complete census of cosmic explosions
Alicia M. Soderberg,Shrinivas R. Kulkarni,Ehud Nakar,Edo Berger,D. B. Fox,Dale A. Frail,Avishay Gal-Yam,Ramazan Sari,S. B. Cenko,M. Kasliwal,P. B. Cameron,Roger A. Chevalier,Tsvi Piran,P. A. Price,Brian P. Schmidt,Guy G. Pooley,D. S. Moon,Bryan E. Penprase,Neil Gehrels,J. A. Nousek,D. N. Burrows,S. E. Perrson,P. J. McCarthy +22 more
- 18 Apr 2006
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The gravitational collapse of gaseous spheres and galaxy formation
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the collapse of gas clouds to form galaxies can occur on a hydrodynamic time scale only if the gas dominates the gravitational field and the inflow forms a central dominant mass.
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Supernovae and supernova remnants at low frequencies
Roger A. Chevalier
- 01 Jan 1990
TL;DR: The intrinsic radio emission from supernovae and their remnants is still poorly understood so that observations over the broadest possible frequency range can be very useful as discussed by the authors, and an example of a peculiarity at low frequencies is the 38 MHz “flare” observed from Cas A in the mid-1970's.
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Neutron Stars in Supernovae and Their Remnants
TL;DR: The magnetic fields of neutron stars have a large range (3e10 - 1e15 G) and are typically dominated by other power sources in supernovae as mentioned in this paper, leading to a tendency for more highly magnetized neutron stars to come from more massive stellar progenitors, but other factors must also play a role.
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