We examine the structure of the post-shock region in supernova remnants
(SNRs). The ``shock transition zone'' is set up by charge transfer and
ionization events between atoms and ions, and has a width ∼1015
cm−2n0−1, where n0 is the total pre-shock density (including
both atoms and ions). For Balmer-dominated SNRs with shock velocity vs≳1000 km s−1, the Rankine-Hugoniot conditions for ion velocity and
temperature are obeyed instantly, leaving the full width at half-maximum (FWHM)
of the broad Hα line versus vs relation intact. However, the spatial
variation in the post-shock densities is relevant to the problem of Lyα
resonant scattering in young, core-collapse SNRs. Both two- (pre-shock atoms
and ions) and three-component (pre-shock atoms, broad neutrals and ions) models
are considered. We compute the spatial emissivities of the broad (ξb) and
narrow (ξn) Hα lines; a calculation of these emissivities in SN
1006 is in general agreement with the computed ones of Raymond et al. (2007).
The (dimensionless) spatial shift, Θshift, between the centroids
of ξb and ξn is unique for a given shock velocity and fion,
the pre-shock ion fraction. Measurements of Θshift can be used
to constrain n0.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journa