A sequence of three Chandra X-ray Observatory High Resolution Camera images
taken over a span of five years reveals arc-second-scale displacement of RX
J0822-4300, the stellar remnant (presumably a neutron star) near the center of
the Puppis A supernova remnant. We measure its proper motion to be
0.165+/-0.025 arcsec/yr toward the west-southwest. At a distance of 2 kpc, this
corresponds to a transverse space velocity of ~1600 km/s. The space velocity is
consistent with the explosion center inferred from proper motions of the
oxygen-rich optical filaments, and confirms the idea that Puppis A resulted
from an asymmetric explosion accompanied by a kick that imparted roughly
3*10^49 ergs of kinetic energy (some 3 percent of the kinetic energy for a
typical supernova) to the stellar remnant. We discuss constraints on
core-collapse supernova models that have been proposed to explain neutron star
kick velocities