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Facts about SNe and their remnants. Evolution of an SNR sensitively depends on its environment. Observed SNRs are typically produced by SNe in relative dense environments. But most (> 80%) of core-collapsed SNe explode in superbubbles (e.g., van Dyk et al. 1996; Higdon et al. 1998).
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Facts about SNe and their remnants • Evolution of an SNR sensitively depends on its environment. • Observed SNRs are typically produced by SNe in relative dense environments. • But most (> 80%) of core-collapsed SNe explode in superbubbles (e.g., van Dyk et al. 1996; Higdon et al. 1998). • Most of Type Ia SNe probably also occur in low density regions (Galactic halo and bulge). Most of SNRs are “missing”!
Missing Supernova Remnants • Characteristics of SNRs in low density regions • Accumulated X-ray emission from such SNRs Q. Daniel Wang (Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst) In collaboration with Shukui Tang, Yang Chen, David Smith, Fangjun Lu, et al.
DA 530 PSPC observation: n0 ~ 0.02-0.05 cm-3 kT ~ 10-15 keV net ~ 8× 1010 cm-3 s 1420 MHz (Landecker et al. 1999)
RX 193214.6+300741 • Exposure: PSPC 3.3 ks • Diameter: ~7 pc (D/10kpc) vertial distance: ~ 1 kpc • L(0.1-2.4): ~1034 ergs/s • Mass: ~ 0.7Msun • n0 ~ 0.02 cm-3 • Age: ~ 7 x 103 yrs (Ve/103 km/s) • Thermal spectrum of a very high T or a Power law • No optical and radio counterparts yet. • 40 ks Chandra obs. approved
G28.6–0.1 • Diameter: ~20 (D/8kpc) • L(2-10): ~3 x 1032 ergs/s • ne t~ 1011 cm-3 s • Thermal spectrum of T ~ 5.4 keV or a Power law of a photon index ~ 2 Image: Chandra ACIS-I observations Contours: VLA 20cm radio Ueno et al. 2003
SNRs in superbubbles T ≤107 K
East half 100 pc West half Smith & Wang 2004 30 Dor C in the LMC
SNRs in the 3-phase ISM The interstellar space is dominated by a hot phase maintained by SNe and/or superbubbles. McKee & Ostriker 1977
Missing SNRs and Galactic ridge X-ray emission A toy model for the GRXE: • SNRs are in a hot medium and emit thermal X-ray emission. • A GRXE spectrum samples the entire evolution of an SNR, according to the model of McKee & Ostriker (1977). • The intermixing between the X-ray emission and absorption is approximately uniform. T0 ≤106 K
Galactic ridge X-ray spectrum in the Chandra deep survey field • SN rate ~ 1/(15-30)yr • Total NH~1.51023 cm-2 • T0~0.01 keV • Abundance: 0.50.1 • Luminosity (0.8-10keV) ~ 91038 erg s-1 SNR thermal Nonthermal (Valinia et al. 2000) Extragalactic
Conclusions • Candidates of SNRs in low density medium have been identified and are yet to be carefully examined. • Most of such SNRs are not observed individually. • They can be detected collectively and may explain the GRXE. • They may have lasting impacts on the Galactic ecosystem.
~ 1055 erg, or ~ 104 Type Ia SNe over the past ~ a few x 107 years. Snowden et al. 1997