78 research outputs found
HEAO-1 analysis of Low Energy Detectors (LED)
The activities at Penn State University are described. During the period Oct. 1990 to Dec. 1991 work on HEAO-1 analysis of the Low Energy Detectors (LED) concentrated on using the improved detector spectral simulation model and fitting diffuse x-ray background spectral data. Spectral fitting results, x-ray point sources, and diffuse x-ray sources are described
0103-72.6: A New Oxygen-Rich Supernova Remnant in the Small Magellanic Cloud
010372.6, the second brightest X-ray supernova remnant (SNR) in the Small
Magellanic Cloud (SMC), has been observed with the {\it Chandra X-Ray
Observatory}. Our {\it Chandra} observation unambiguously resolves the X-ray
emission into a nearly complete, remarkably circular shell surrounding bright
clumpy emission in the center of the remnant. The observed X-ray spectrum for
the central region is evidently dominated by emission from reverse shock-heated
metal-rich ejecta. Elemental abundances in this ejecta material are
particularly enhanced in oxygen and neon, while less prominent in the heavier
elements Si, S, and Fe. We thus propose that 010372.6 is a new
``oxygen-rich'' SNR, making it only the second member of the class in the SMC.
The outer shell is the limb-brightened, soft X-ray emission from the swept-up
SMC interstellar medium. The presence of O-rich ejecta and the SNR's location
within an H{\small II} region attest to a massive star core-collapse origin for
010372.6. The elemental abundance ratios derived from the ejecta suggest an
18 M progenitor star.Comment: 6 pages (ApJ emulator format), including 5 figures and 2 tables. For
high quality Figs.1,2, & 3, contact [email protected]. Accepted by the ApJ
Letter
The Radial Structure of SNR N103B
We report on the results from a Chandra ACIS observation of the young,
compact, supernova remnant N103B. The unprecedented spatial resolution of
Chandra reveals sub-arcsecond structure, both in the brightness and in spectral
variations. Underlying these small-scale variations is a surprisingly simple
radial structure in the equivalent widths of the strong Si and S emission
lines. We investigate these radial variations through spatially resolved
spectroscopy using a plane-parallel, non-equilibrium ionization model with
multiple components. The majority of the emission arises from components with a
temperature of 1 keV: a fully ionized hydrogen component; a high ionization
timescale (n_e*t > 10^12 s cm^-3) component containing Si, S, Ar, Ca, and Fe;
and a low ionization timescale (n_e*t ~ 10^{11} s cm^-3) O, Ne, and Mg
component. To reproduce the strong Fe Kalpha line, it is necessary to include
additional Fe in a hot (> 2 keV), low ionization (n_e*t ~ 10^10.8 s cm^-3)
component. This hot Fe may be in the form of hot Fe bubbles, formed in the
radioactive decay of clumps of 56Ni. We find no radial variation in the
ionization timescales or temperatures of the various components. Rather, the Si
and S equivalent widths increase at large radii because these lines, as well as
those of Ar and Ca, are formed in a shell occupying the outer half of the
remnant. A shell of hot Fe is located interior to this, but there is a large
region of overlap between these two shells. In the inner 30% of the remnant,
there is a core of cooler, 1 keV Fe. We find that the distribution of the
ejecta and the yields of the intermediate mass species are consistent with
model prediction for Type Ia events.Comment: 34 pages, including 7 tables and 7 figures, Accepted by Ap
The Chandra View of the Supernova Remnant 0506-68.0 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
A new Chandra observation of SNR 0506-68.0 (also called N23) reveals a
complex, highly structured morphology in the low energy X-ray band and an
isolated compact central object in the high energy band. Spectral analysis
indicates that the X-ray emission overall is dominated by thermal gas whose
composition is consistent with swept-up ambient material. There is a strong
gradient in ambient density across the diameter of the remnant. Toward the
southeast, near a prominent star cluster, the emitting density is 10 - 23
cm^{-3} while toward the northwest it has dropped to a value of only 1 cm^{-3}.
The total extent of the X-ray remnant is 100" by 120" (24 pc x 29 pc for a
distance of 50 kpc), somewhat larger than previously known. The remnant's age
is estimated to be ~4600 yr. One part of the remnant shows evidence for
enhanced O, Ne, and perhaps Mg abundances, which is interpreted as evidence for
ejecta from a massive star core collapse supernova. The compact central object
has a luminosity of a few times 10^{33} ergs/s and no obvious radio or optical
counterpart. It does not show an extended nebula or pulsed emission as expected
from a young energetic pulsar, but resembles the compact central objects seen
in other core collapse SNe, such as Cas A.Comment: 5 pages, including 3 postscript figs, LaTeX, accepted to appear in
ApJ Letter
- …