Discovery of X-RAY Emission from the Galactic Supernova Remnant G32.8-0.1 with Suzaku

Aya Bamba, Yukikatsu Terada, John W. Hewitt, Robert Petre, Lorella Angelini, Samar Safi-Harb, Ping Zhou, Fabrizio Bocchino, Makoto Sawada

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

We present the first dedicated X-ray study of the supernova remnant (SNR) G32.8−0.1 (Kes 78) with Suzaku . X-ray emission from the whole SNR shell has been detected for the first time. The X-ray morphology is well correlated with the emission from the radio shell, while anti-correlated with the molecular cloud found in the SNR field. The X-ray spectrum shows not only conventional low-temperature ( kT ∼ 0.6 keV) thermal emission in a non-equilibrium ionization state, but also a very high-temperature ( kT ∼ 3.4 keV) component with a very low ionization timescale (∼2.7 × 109 cm−3 s), or a hard nonthermal component with a photon index Γ ∼ 2.3. The average density of the low-temperature plasma is rather low, of the order of 10−3–10−2 cm−3, implying that this SNR is expanding into a low-density cavity. We discuss the X-ray emission of the SNR, also detected in TeV with H.E.S.S. , together with multi-wavelength studies of the remnant and other gamma-ray emitting SNRs, such as W28 and RCW 86. Analysis of a time-variable source, 2XMM J185114.3−000004, found in the northern part of the SNR, is also reported for the first time. Rapid time variability and a heavily absorbed hard-X-ray spectrum suggest that this source could be a new supergiant fast X-ray transient.

Idioma originalAmerican English
Páginas (desde-hasta)63
PublicaciónThe Astrophysical Journal
Volumen818
N.º1
DOI
EstadoPublished - feb 8 2016

Disciplines

  • Astrophysics and Astronomy

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