492 research outputs found
Radio observations of Supernova Remnants and the surrounding molecular gas
Supernova Remnants (SNRs) are believed to be the main source of Galactic
cosmic rays (CR). The strong SNR shocks provide ideal acceleration sites for
particles of at least 10^14 eV/nucleon. Radio continuum studies of SNRs carried
out with good sensitivity and high angular resolution convey information about
three main aspects of the SNRs: morphology, polarization and spectrum. Based on
this information it is possible to localize sites of higher compression and
particle acceleration as well as the orientation and degree of order of the
magnetic fields, and in some cases even its intensity. All this information,
when complemented with the study of the distribution and kinematics of the
surrounding interstellar gas, results in a very useful dataset to investigate
the role of SNRs as cosmic ray accelerators. In this presentation, I analyze
the radio observations of SNRs and surrounding molecular clouds, showing the
contribution of these studies to the understanding of the role of SNRs as
factories of CRs.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Invited review presented at the conference on
Cosmic Rays and the Interstellar Medium (CRISM-2011) held in Montpellier
(France), June 26- July 1. To be published in a special issue of Memorie
della Societa Astronomica Italian
A Multi-Wavelength Study of the Western Lobe of W50 Powered by the Galactic Microquasar SS 433
W50 remains the only supernova remnant (SNR) confirmed to harbor a
microquasar: the powerful enigmatic source SS 433. Our past study of this
fascinating SNR revealed two X-ray lobes distorting the radio shell as well as
non-thermal X-rays at the site of interaction between the SS 433 eastern jet
and the eastern lobe of W50. In this paper we present the results of a 75 ksec
CHANDRA ACIS-I observation of the peak of W50-west targeted to 1) determine the
nature of the X-ray emission and 2) correlate the X-ray emission with that in
the radio and infrared domains. We have confirmed that at the site of
interaction between the western jet of SS 433 and dense interstellar gas the
X-ray emission is non-thermal in nature. The helical pattern observed in radio
is also seen with CHANDRA. No correlation was found between the infrared and
X-ray emission.Comment: A refereed publication, submitted Sept. 30, 2004, accepted Jan. 12,
2005, to appear in Advances in Space Research. 7 pages, including 4 figures
(3 color) & 1 table (the resolution of most figures has been reduced for
astro-ph submission only). A gzipped postscript or pdf version of the paper
with high-resolution images can be downloaded from:
http://aurora.physics.umanitoba.ca/~moldowan/Astro-Ph
A multi-frequency study of the spectral index distribution in the SNR CTB 80
We have conducted a study at radio wavelengths of the spectral behaviour of
the supernova remnant (SNR) CTB 80. Based on an homogenised data set of
integrated flux densities, we calculated for the whole SNR a radio index -0.36
+/- 0.02. The shape of the global spectrum suggests absorption by ionized gas
in the interstellar medium (ISM) along the line of sight. Spatial spectral
variations across the SNR are investigated based on high-angular resolution
data at 240, 324, 610, and 1380 MHz using different techniques. The three
extended arms associated with this SNR, show a clear indication of spectral
steepening when moving outwards from the central nebula, with variations of up
to - 0.9. However, while the spectral steepening is smooth along the eastern
arm, the northern and soutwestern arms include locally flatter structures,
which in all cases coincide with radio, IR, and optical emission enhancements.
We interpret this spectral property as the result of the combination of two
different particle populations: aging relativistic electrons injected by PSR
B1951+32 and particles accelerated at the sites where the SNR shock front
encounters interstellar gas inhomogeneities. Concerning the central nebula, the
angular resolution of the available database does not permit a detailed
spectral study of the core region, i.e. the 45'' region around PSR B1951+32,
where we can only confirm an average spectral index alpha=0.0. The surrounding
8' plateau nebula has an ~ -0.25, with a peak of alpha ~ -0.29
coincident with a secondary maximun located at the termination of a twisted
filament that trails to the east, behind the pulsar.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
The molecular clump towards the eastern border of SNR G18.8+0.3
The eastern border of the SNR G18.8+0.3, close to an HII regions complex, is
a very interesting region to study the molecular gas that it is probably in
contact with the SNR shock front. We observed the aforementioned region using
the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment (ASTE) in the 12CO J=3-2, 13CO
J=3-2, HCO+ J=4-3, and CS J=7-6 lines with an angular resolution of 22". To
complement these observations, we analyzed IR, submillimeter and radio
continuum archival data. In this work, we clearly show that the radio continuum
"protrusion" that was early thought to belong to the SNR is an HII regions
complex deeply embedded in a molecular clump. The new molecular observations
reveal that this dense clump, belonging to an extended molecular cloud that
surrounds the SNR southeast border, is not physically in contact with SNR
G18.8+0.3, suggesting that the SNR shock front have not yet reached it or maybe
they are located at different distances. We found some young stellar objects
embedded in the molecular clump, suggesting that their formation should be
approximately coeval with the SN explosion.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (Sept. 7, 2012
A hadronic scenario for HESS J1818-154
Aims: G15.4+0.1 is a faint supernova remnant (SNR) that has recently been
associated with the gamma-ray source HESS J1818-154. We investigate a hadronic
scenario for the production of the gamma-ray emission. Methods: Molecular 13CO
(J=1-0) taken from the Galactic Ring Survey (GRS) and neutral hydrogen (HI)
data from the Southern Galactic Plane Survey (SGPS) have been used in
combination with new 1420 MHz radio continuum observations carried out with the
Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT). Results: From the new observations and
analysis of archival data we provided for the first time a reliable estimate
for the distance to the SNR G15.4+0.1 and discovered molecular clouds located
at the same distance. On the basis of HI absorption features, we estimate the
distance to G15.4+0.1 in 4.8+/-1.0 kpc. The 13CO observations clearly show a
molecular cloud about 5 arcmin in size with two bright clumps, labeled A and B,
clump A positionally associated with the location of HESS J1818-154 and clump B
in coincidence with the brightest northern border of the radio SNR shell. The
HI absorption and the 13CO emission study indicates a possible interaction
between the molecular material and the remnant. We estimate the masses and
densities of the molecular gas as (1.2+/-0.5)X10^3 M_sun and (1.5+/-0.4)X10^3
cm^-3 for clump A and (3.0+/-0.7)X10^3 M_sun and (1.1+/-0.3)X10^3 cm^-3 for
clump B. Calculations show that the average density of the molecular clump A is
sufficient to produce the detected gamma-ray flux, thus favoring a hadronic
origin for the high-energy emission.Comment: Accepted to be published in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
e-MERLIN observations of the puzzling TeV source HESS J1943+213
HESS J1943+213 is a TeV source close to the Galactic plane proposed to be a
BL Lac object. Our high resolution EVN observation failed to recover two thirds
of the source flux density detected simultaneously by the WSRT. Our recent
e-MERLIN observations in L and C bands show only a point source with flux
density comparable to the EVN detection. Thus the structure responsible for the
missing flux density has to be larger than 2". It may be related to the
presumed extragalactic source (thus would have a kpc-scale size), or to the
Galactic foreground material close to the line of sight to the source.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, appears in the proceedings of the 12th European
VLBI Network Symposium and Users Meeting (7-10 October 2014, Cagliari,
Italy), eds. A. Tarchi, M. Giroletti & L. Feretti. Proceedings of Science,
PoS(EVN 2014)07
Radio and X-ray study of two multi-shell Supernova Remnants: Kes79 and G352.7-0.1
We investigate two multi-shell galactic supernova remnants (SNRs), Kes79 and
G352.7-0.1, to understand the causes of such morphology. The research was
carried out based on new and reprocessed archival VLA observations and
XMM-Newton archival data. The surrounding was investigated based on data
extracted from the HI Canadian Galactic Plane Survey, the 13^CO Galactic Ring
Survey and the HI Southern Galactic Plane Survey. The present study revealed
that the overall morphology of both SNRs is the result of the mass-loss history
of their respective progenitor stars. Kes79 would be the product of the
gravitational collapse of a massive O9 star evolving near a molecular cloud and
within the precursor's wind-driven bubble, while G352.7-0.1 would be the result
of interactions of the SNR with an asymmetric wind from the progenitor together
with projection effects. No radio point source or pulsar wind nebula was found
associated with the X-ray pulsar CXOU J185238.6+004020 in Kes79. The X-ray
study of G352.7-0.1, on its hand, revealed that most of the thermal X-ray
radiation completely fills in the interior of the remnant and originates in
heated ejecta. Characteristic parameters, like radio flux, radio spectral
index, age, distance, shock velocity, initial energy and luminosity, were
estimated for both SNRs.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures. Accepted to be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Feature-tailored spectroscopic analysis of the SNR Puppis A in X-rays
We introduce a distinct method to perform spatially-resolved spectral
analysis of astronomical sources with highly structured X-ray emission. The
method measures the surface brightness of neighbouring pixels to adaptively
size and shape each region, thus the spectra from the bright and faint
filamentary structures evident in the broadband images can be extracted. As a
test case, we present the spectral analysis of the complete X-ray emitting
plasma in the supernova remnant Puppis A observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra.
Given the angular size of Puppis A, many pointings with different observational
configurations have to be combined, presenting a challenge to any method of
spatially-resolved spectroscopy. From the fit of a plane-parallel shocked
plasma model we find that temperature, absorption column, ionization time
scale, emission measure and elemental abundances of O, Ne, Mg, Si, S and Fe,
are smoothly distributed in the remnant. Some regions with overabundances of
O-Ne-Mg, previously characterized as ejecta material, were automatically
selected by our method, proving the excellent response of the technique. This
method is an advantageous tool for the exploitation of archival X-ray data.Comment: Accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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