1,253 research outputs found
Jadeite originating from plagioclase in L6 and H6 chondrites
第2回極域科学シンポジウム/第34回南極隕石シンポジウム 11月18日(金) 国立国語研究所 2階講
Chandra Observations of A Galactic Supernova Remnant Vela Jr.: A New Sample of Thin Filaments Emitting Synchrotron X-Rays
A galactic supernova remnant (SNR) Vela Jr. (RX J0852.04622, G266.61.2)
shows sharp filamentary structure on the north-western edge of the remnant in
the hard X-ray band. The filaments are so smooth and located on the most outer
side of the remnant. We measured the averaged scale width of the filaments
( and ) with excellent spatial resolution of {\it Chandra}, which are
in the order of the size of the point spread function of {\it Chandra} on the
upstream side and 49.5 (36.0--88.8) arcsec on the downstream side,
respectively. The spectra of the filaments are very hard and have no line-like
structure, and were well reproduced with an absorbed power-law model with
2.67 (2.55--2.77), or a {\tt SRCUT} model with = 4.3
(3.4--5.3) Hz under the assumption of . These results
imply that the hard X-rays are synchrotron radiation emitted by accelerated
electrons, as mentioned previously. Using a correlation between a function
and the SNR age, we estimated the
distance and the age of Vela Jr.: the estimated distance and age are 0.33
(0.26--0.50) kpc and 660 (420--1400) years, respectively. These results are
consistent with previous reports, implying that --age relation may be
a useful tool to estimate the distance and the age of synchrotron X-ray
emitting SNRs.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, ApJ, in pres
Discovery of Strong Radiative Recombination Continua from The Supernova Remnant IC 443 with Suzaku
We present the Suzaku spectroscopic study of the Galactic middle-aged
supernova remnant (SNR) IC 443. The X-ray spectrum in the 1.75-6.0 keV band is
described by an optically-thin thermal plasma with the electron temperature of
0.6 keV and several additional Lyman lines. We robustly detect, for the first
time, strong radiative recombination continua (RRC) of H-like Si and S around
at 2.7 and 3.5 keV. The ionization temperatures of Si and S determined from the
intensity ratios of the RRC to He-like K-alpha line are 1.0 keV and 1.2 keV,
respectively. We thus find firm evidence for an extremely-overionized
(recombining) plasma. As the origin of the overionization, a thermal conduction
scenario argued in previous work is not favored in our new results. We propose
that the highly-ionized gas were made at the initial phase of the SNR evolution
in dense regions around a massive progenitor, and the low electron temperature
is due to a rapid cooling by an adiabatic expansion.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ Lette
Nonthermal X-radiation of SNR RX J1713.7-3946: The Relations to a Nearby Molecular Cloud
The recent X-ray and CO observations of RX J1713.7-3946 show that a
significant fraction of the nonthermal X-ray emission of this unique supernova
remnant associates, in one way or another, with a molecular cloud interacting
with the west part of the shell. This adds a new puzzle in the origin of X-ray
emission which cannot be easily explained within the standard model in
accordance of which X-rays are result of synchrotron radiation of multi-TeV
electrons accelerated by supernova shock waves. We explore an alternative
origin of the X-ray emission assuming that it is produced by secondary
electrons resulting from high energy hadronic interactions in the molecular
gas. Such a scenario could explain in a quite natural way the apparent
correlation between the X-ray and CO morphologies. However, the TeV gamma-ray
emission recently reported by H.E.S.S. significantly constrains the parameter
space of this model. Namely, this mechanism cannot reproduce the bulk of the
observed X-ray flux unless one postulates existence of a PeV cosmic-ray
component penetrating with an unusually hard spectrum into the dense cloud.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Proc. of Int. Symp. on High Energy
Gamma-ray Astronomy, Heidelberg (July 2004
Discriminating the Progenitor Type of Supernova Remnants with Iron K-Shell Emission
Supernova remnants (SNRs) retain crucial information about both their parent
explosion and circumstellar material left behind by their progenitor. However,
the complexity of the interaction between supernova ejecta and ambient medium
often blurs this information, and it is not uncommon for the basic progenitor
type (Ia or core-collapse) of well-studied remnants to remain uncertain. Here
we present a powerful new observational diagnostic to discriminate between
progenitor types and constrain the ambient medium density of SNRs solely using
Fe K-shell X-ray emission. We analyze all extant Suzaku observations of SNRs
and detect Fe K alpha emission from 23 young or middle-aged remnants, including
five first detections (IC 443, G292.0+1.8, G337.2-0.7, N49, and N63A). The Fe K
alpha centroids clearly separate progenitor types, with the Fe-rich ejecta in
Type Ia remnants being significantly less ionized than in core-collapse SNRs.
Within each progenitor group, the Fe K alpha luminosity and centroid are well
correlated, with more luminous objects having more highly ionized Fe. Our
results indicate that there is a strong connection between explosion type and
ambient medium density, and suggest that Type Ia supernova progenitors do not
substantially modify their surroundings at radii of up to several parsecs. We
also detect a K-shell radiative recombination continuum of Fe in W49B and IC
443, implying a strong circumstellar interaction in the early evolutionary
phases of these core-collapse remnants.Comment: Accepted by ApJL; 5 pages with just 1 table and 1 figur
Measuring the Broad-band X-Ray Spectrum from 400 eV to 40 keV in the Southwest Part of the Supernova Remnant RX J1713.7-3946
We report on results from Suzaku broadband X-ray observations of the
southwest part of the Galactic supernova remnant (SNR) RX J1713.7-3946 with an
energy coverage of 0.4-40 keV. The X-ray spectrum, presumably of synchrotron
origin, is known to be completely lineless, making this SNR ideally suited for
a detailed study of the X-ray spectral shape formed through efficient particle
acceleration at high speed shocks. With a sensitive hard X-ray measurement from
the HXD PIN on board Suzaku, we determine the hard X-ray spectrum in the 12--40
keV range to be described by a power law with photon index Gamma = 3.2+/- 0.2,
significantly steeper than the soft X-ray index of Gamma = 2.4+/- 0.05 measured
previously with ASCA and other missions. We find that a simple power law fails
to describe the full spectral range of 0.4-40 keV and instead a power-law with
an exponential cutoff with hard index Gamma = 1.50+/- 0.09 and high-energy
cutoff epsilon_c = 1.2+/- 0.3 keV formally provides an excellent fit over the
full bandpass. If we use the so-called SRCUT model, as an alternative model, it
gives the best-fit rolloff energy of epsilon_{roll} = 0.95+/- 0.04 keV.
Together with the TeV gamma-ray spectrum ranging from 0.3 to 100 TeV obtained
recently by HESS observations, our Suzaku observations of RX J1713.7-3946
provide stringent constraints on the highest energy particles accelerated in a
supernova shock.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Japan (PASJ
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