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A JWST Survey of the Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A

Authors :
Dan Milisavljevic
Tea Temim
Ilse De Looze
Danielle Dickinson
J. Martin Laming
Robert Fesen
John C. Raymond
Richard G. Arendt
Jacco Vink
Bettina Posselt
George G. Pavlov
Ori D. Fox
Ethan Pinarski
Bhagya Subrayan
Judy Schmidt
William P. Blair
Armin Rest
Daniel Patnaude
Bon-Chul Koo
Jeonghee Rho
Salvatore Orlando
Hans-Thomas Janka
Moira Andrews
Michael J. Barlow
Adam Burrows
Roger Chevalier
Geoffrey Clayton
Claes Fransson
Christopher Fryer
Haley L. Gomez
Florian Kirchschlager
Jae-Joon Lee
Mikako Matsuura
Maria Niculescu-Duvaz
Justin D. R. Pierel
Paul P. Plucinsky
Felix D. Priestley
Aravind P. Ravi
Nina S. Sartorio
Franziska Schmidt
Melissa Shahbandeh
Patrick Slane
Nathan Smith
Niharika Sravan
Kathryn Weil
Roger Wesson
J. Craig Wheeler
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol 965, Iss 2, p L27 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

We present initial results from a James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) survey of the youngest Galactic core-collapse supernova remnant, Cassiopeia A (Cas A), made up of NIRCam and MIRI imaging mosaics that map emission from the main shell, interior, and surrounding circumstellar/interstellar material (CSM/ISM). We also present four exploratory positions of MIRI Medium Resolution Spectrograph integral field unit spectroscopy that sample ejecta, CSM, and associated dust from representative shocked and unshocked regions. Surprising discoveries include (1) a weblike network of unshocked ejecta filaments resolved to ∼0.01 pc scales exhibiting an overall morphology consistent with turbulent mixing of cool, low-entropy matter from the progenitor’s oxygen layer with hot, high-entropy matter heated by neutrino interactions and radioactivity; (2) a thick sheet of dust-dominated emission from shocked CSM seen in projection toward the remnant’s interior pockmarked with small (∼1″) round holes formed by ≲0.″1 knots of high-velocity ejecta that have pierced through the CSM and driven expanding tangential shocks; and (3) dozens of light echoes with angular sizes between ∼0.″1 and 1′ reflecting previously unseen fine-scale structure in the ISM. NIRCam observations place new upper limits on infrared emission (≲20 nJy at 3 μ m) from the neutron star in Cas A’s center and tightly constrain scenarios involving a possible fallback disk. These JWST survey data and initial findings help address unresolved questions about massive star explosions that have broad implications for the formation and evolution of stellar populations, the metal and dust enrichment of galaxies, and the origin of compact remnant objects.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
965
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2737691eb9b4fc79f78fcc284ecfa83
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad324b