1. XMM-Newton observation of SNR J0533-7202 in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
- Author
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Kavanagh, P. J., Sasaki, M., Whelan, E. T., Maggi, P., Haberl, F., Bozzetto, L. M., Filipović, M. D., and Crawford, E. J.
- Subjects
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SUPERNOVA remnants , *LARGE magellanic cloud , *X-ray astronomy , *STAR formation , *INTERSTELLAR medium - Abstract
Aims. We present an X-ray study of the supernova remnant SNR J0533-7202 in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and determine its physical characteristics based on its X-ray emission. Methods. We observed SNR J0533-7202 with XMM-Newton (background flare-filtered exposure times of 18 ks EPIC-pn and 31 ks EPIC-MOS1, EPIC-MOS2). We produced X-ray images of the supernova remnant, performed an X-ray spectral analysis, and compared the results to multi-wavelength studies. Results. The distribution of X-ray emission is highly non-uniform, with the south-west region much brighter than the north-east. The detected X-ray emission is correlated with the radio emission from the remnant.We determine that this morphology is most likely due to the supernova remnant expanding into a non-uniform ambient medium and not an absorption e ect. We estimate the remnant size to be 53:9 (±3:4) × 43:6 (±3:4) pc, with the major axis rotated ∼64° east of north. We find no spectral signatures of ejecta emission and infer that the X-ray plasma is dominated by swept up interstellar medium. Using the spectral fit results and the Sedov self-similar solution, we estimate the age of SNR J0533-7202 to be ∼17-27 kyr, with an initial explosion energy of (0:09-0:83) × 1051 erg. We detected an X-ray source located near the centre of the remnant, namely XMMU J053348.2-720233. The source type could not be conclusively determined due to the lack of a multi-wavelength counterpart and low X-ray counts. We found that it is likely either a background active galactic nucleus or a low-mass X-ray binary in the LMC. Conclusions. We detected bright thermal X-ray emission from SNR J0533-7202 and determined that the remnant is in the Sedov phase of its evolution. The lack of ejecta emission prohibits us from typing the remnant with the X-ray data. Therefore, the likely Type Ia classification based on the local stellar population and star formation history reported in the literature cannot be improved upon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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