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A Chandra View of The Morphological And Spectral Evolution of Supernova Remnant 1987A

Abstract

We present an update on the results of our monitoring observations of the X-ray remnant of supernova (SN) 1987A with the {\it Chandra X-Ray Observatory}. As of 2002 December, we have performed a total of seven observations of SN 1987A. The high angular resolution images from the latest data reveal developments of new X-ray bright spots in the northwestern and the southwestern portions of the remnant as well as changes on the eastern side. The latest 0.5-2 keV band flux (fXf_X \sim 6 ×\times 1013^{-13} ergs cm2^{-2} s1^{-1}) is four times brighter than three years earlier. The overall X-ray emission is primarily from the blast wave shock with kTkT \sim 2.4 keV. As the blast wave approaches the dense circumstellar material, the contribution from the decelerated slow shock (kTkT \sim 0.22 keV) to the observed X-ray emission is becoming significant. The increase of this slow shock contribution over the last two years is particularly noticeable in the western half of the remnant. These results indicate that the shock front is now reaching the main body of the inner circumstellar ring. Based on the best-fit two-shock spectral model, we derive approximate densities of the X-ray-emitting regions (nen_e \sim 235 cm3^{-3} for the fast shock and nen_e \sim 7500 cm3^{-3} for the slow shock). We obtain an upper limit on the observed X-ray luminosity of any embedded point source (LXL_X \le 1.5 ×\times 1034^{34} ergs s1^{-1}) in the 2-10 keV band. The X-ray remnant continues to expand linearly at a rate of 4167 km s1^{-1}.Comment: 22 pages (ApJ preprint style), 7 Figures, Accepted by ApJ (scheduled on July 20, 2004), for high-quality Fig 1 and Fig 2, please contact [email protected]

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