We explore the role of anisotropic thermal conduction on the evolution of
supernova remnants through interstellar media with a range of densities via
numerical simulations. We find that a remnant expanding in a dense environment
can produce centre-bright hard x-ray emission within 20 kyr, and centre-bright
soft x-ray emission within 60 kyr of the supernova event. In a more tenuous
environment, the appearance of a centre-bright structure in hard x-rays is
delayed until about 60 kyr. The soft x-ray emission from such a remnant may not
become centre bright during its observable lifetime. This can explain the
observations that show that mixed-morphology supernova remnants preferentially
occur close to denser, molecular environments. Remnants expanding into denser
environments tend to be smaller, making it easier for thermal conduction to
make larger changes in the temperatures of their hot gas bubbles. We show that
the lower temperatures make it very favorable to use high-stage ions as
diagnostics of the hot gas bubbles in SNRs. In particular, the distribution of
O VIII transitions from shell-bright at early epochs to centre-bright at later
epochs in the evolution of an SNR expanding in a dense ISM when the physics of
thermal conduction is included.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Monthly Notice