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Mapping High-velocity H-alpha and Lyman-alpha Emission from Supernova 1987A

Abstract

We present new {\it Hubble Space Telescope} images of high-velocity H-α\alpha and Lyman-α\alpha emission in the outer debris of SN~1987A. The H-α\alpha images are dominated by emission from hydrogen atoms crossing the reverse shock. For the first time we observe emission from the reverse shock surface well above and below the equatorial ring, suggesting a bipolar or conical structure perpendicular to the ring plane. Using the Hα\alpha imaging, we measure the mass flux of hydrogen atoms crossing the reverse shock front, in the velocity intervals (-7,500~<<~VobsV_{obs}~<<~-2,800 km s1^{-1}) and (1,000~<<~VobsV_{obs}~<<~7,500 km s1^{-1}), MH˙\dot{M_{H}} = 1.2~×\times~103^{-3} M_{\odot} yr1^{-1}. We also present the first Lyman-α\alpha imaging of the whole remnant and new ChandraChandra X-ray observations. Comparing the spatial distribution of the Lyman-α\alpha and X-ray emission, we observe that the majority of the high-velocity Lyman-α\alpha emission originates interior to the equatorial ring. The observed Lyman-α\alpha/H-α\alpha photon ratio, \langleR(Lα/Hα)R(L\alpha / H\alpha)\rangle \approx~17, is significantly higher than the theoretically predicted ratio of \approx 5 for neutral atoms crossing the reverse shock front. We attribute this excess to Lyman-α\alpha emission produced by X-ray heating of the outer debris. The spatial orientation of the Lyman-α\alpha and X-ray emission suggests that X-ray heating of the outer debris is the dominant Lyman-α\alpha production mechanism in SN 1987A at this phase in its evolution.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. ApJL - accepte

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