2,427 research outputs found

    XMM-Newton, Chandra, and CGPS observations of the Supernova Remnants G85.4+0.7 and G85.9-0.6

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    We present an XMM-Newton detection of two low radio surface brightness SNRs, G85.4+0.7 and G85.9-0.6, discovered with the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey (CGPS). High-resolution XMM-Newton images revealing the morphology of the diffuse emission, as well as discrete point sources, are presented and correlated with radio and Chandra images. The new data also permit a spectroscopic analysis of the diffuse emission regions, and a spectroscopic and timing analysis of the point sources. Distances have been determined from HI and CO data to be 3.5 +/- 1.0 kpc for SNR G85.4+0.7 and 4.8 +/- 1.6 kpc for SNR G85.9-0.6. The SNR G85.4+0.7 is found to have a temperature of ~12-13 MK and a 0.5-2.5 keV luminosity of ~1-4 x 10^33 D(3.5)^2 erg/s (where D(3.5) is the distance in units of 3.5 kpc), with an electron density n_e of ~0.07-0.16(fD(3.5))^-1/2 cm^-3 (where f is the volume filling factor), and a shock age of ~9-49(fD(3.5))^1/2 kyr. The SNR G85.9-0.6 is found to have a temperature of ~15-19 MK and a 0.5-2.5 keV luminosity of ~1-4 x 10^34 D(4.8)^2 erg/s (where D(4.8) is the distance in units of 4.8 kpc), with an electron density n_e of ~0.04-0.10(fD(4.8))^-1/2 cm^-3 and a shock age of ~12-42(fD(4.8))^1/2 kyr. Based on the data presented here, none of the point sources appears to be the neutron star associated with either SNR.Comment: 30 pages using emulateapj, 16 figures with quality reduced for astro-ph only. The original version with high-resolution figures can be downloaded from: http://www.physics.umanitoba.ca/~samar/astro-ph/G85s-ms09102007.pdf To appear in ApJ (Jan 20 2008 issue, v673, n1

    A Multi-Wavelength Study of the Western Lobe of W50 Powered by the Galactic Microquasar SS 433

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    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

    Spatial Distribution of Metal Emissions in SNR 3C 397 Viewed with Chandra and XMM

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    We present X-ray equivalent width imaging of the supernova remnant (SNR) 3C 397 for Mg He\alpha, Si He\alpha, S He\alpha, and Fe K\alpha complex lines with the Chandra and XMM-Newton observations. The images reveal that the heavier the element is, the smaller the extent of the element distribution is. The Mg emission is evidently enhanced in the southeastern blow-out region, well along the radio boundary there, and appears to partially envelope the eastern Fe knot. Two bilateral hat-like Si line-emitting structures are along the northern and southern borders, roughly symmetric with respect to the southeast-northwest elongation axis. An S line-emitting shell is located just inner to the northern radio and IR shell, indicating of a layer of reversely shocked sulphur in the ejecta. A few enhanced Fe features are basically aligned along the diagonal of the rectangular shape of the SNR, which implicates an early asymmetric SN explosion.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, appears in Science China Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy, 2010, 53 (Suppl.1), 267-27
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