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SRG/eROSITA discovery of a radio-faint X-ray candidate supernova remnant SRGe J003602.3+605421 = G121.1−1.9

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Khabibullin,  I. I.
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Churazov,  E. M.
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Sunyaev,  R. A.
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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引用

Khabibullin, I. I., Churazov, E. M., Bykov, A. M., Chugai, N. N., & Sunyaev, R. A. (2023). SRG/eROSITA discovery of a radio-faint X-ray candidate supernova remnant SRGe J003602.3+605421 = G121.1−1.9. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 521(4), 5536-5556. doi:10.1093/mnras/stad818.


引用: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000D-7B3D-6
要旨
We report the discovery of a candidate X-ray supernova remnant SRGe J003602.3+605421 = G121.1−1.9 in the course of the SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey. The object is located at (l, b) = (121.1°, −1.9°), is ≈36 arcmin in angular size, and has a nearly circular shape. Clear variations in the spectral shape of the X-ray emission across the object are detected, with the emission from the inner (within 9 arcmin) and outer (9–18 arcmin) parts dominated by iron and oxygen/neon lines, respectively. The non-equilibrium plasma emission model is capable of describing the spectrum of the outer part with an initial gas temperature 0.1 keV, final temperature 0.5 keV, and ionization age ∼2 × 1010 cm−3 s. The observed spectrum of the inner region is more complicated (plausibly due to the contribution of the outer shell) and requires a substantial overabundance of iron for all models that we have tried. The derived X-ray absorption is equal to (4–6) × 1021 cm−2, locating the object at a distance beyond 1.5 kpc, and implying its age ∼(5–30) × 1000 yr. No bright radio, infrared, H α, or gamma-ray counterpart of this object has been found in the publicly available archival data. A model invoking a canonical 1051 erg explosion (either SN Ia or core collapse) in the hot and tenuous medium in the outer region of the Galaxy ∼9 kpc away might explain the bulk of the observed features. This scenario can be tested with future deep X-ray and radio observations.