IAFE   05512
INSTITUTO DE ASTRONOMIA Y FISICA DEL ESPACIO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
A new young galactic supernova remnant containing a compact object: G15.9+0.2
Autor/es:
REYNOLDS, S., BORKOWSKI, K., HWANG, U., HARRUS, I., PETRE, R., DUBNER, G.
Revista:
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Editorial:
University of Chicago Press
Referencias:
Lugar: Chicago; Año: 2006 vol. 652 p. 45 - 48
ISSN:
0004-637X
Resumen:
We identify the radio-emitting shell-type supernova remnant G15.9+0.2 as a relatively young remnant containing an X-ray point source that may be its associated neutron star. The integrated spectrum of the remnant shell obtained from our 30 ks exploratory Chandra observation shows very strong lines that require elevated element abundances from ejecta, in particular of sulfur. A plane-shock model fit gives a temperature kT=0.9 (0.8, 1.0) keV, an ionization timescale net=6 (4, 9)×1010 cm-3 s, and a sulfur abundance of 2.1 (1.7, 2.7) times solar (90% confidence limits). Two-component models with one solar and one enriched component are also plausible, but they are not well constrained by the data. Various estimates give a remnant age of order 103 yr, which would make G15.9+0.2 among the dozen or so youngest remnants in the Galaxy. The sparse point-source spectrum is consistent with either a steep Gamma~4 power law or a kT~0.4 keV blackbody. The spectrum is absorbed by a H column density NH~4×1022 cm-2 similar to that required for the remnant shell. The implied 2-9.5 keV source luminosity is about 1033 ergs s-1 for an assumed distance of 8.5 kpc consistent with the high absorption column. We suggest that the point source is either a rotation-powered pulsar or a compact central object.