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25 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0108173

 Article overview



Molecular and Ionic shocks in the Supernova Remnant 3C391
William T. Reach ; Jeonghee Rho ; T. H. Jarrett ; Pierre-Olivier Lagage ;
Date 10 Aug 2001
Subject astro-ph
AbstractNew observations of the supernova remnant 3C391 are in the H2 2.12 micron and [Fe II] 1.64 micron narrow-band filters at the Palomar 200-inch telescope, and in the 5-15 micron CVF on ISOCAM. Shocked H2 emission was detected from the region 3C391:BML, where broad millimeter CO and CS lines had previously been detected. A new H2 clump was confirmed to have broad CO emission, demonstrating that the near-infrared H2 images can trace previously undetected molecular shocks. The [Fe II] emission has a significantly different distribution, being brightest in the bright radio bar, at the interface between the supernova remnant and the giant molecular cloud, and following filaments in the radio shell. The near-infrared [Fe II] and the mid-infrared 12-18 micron filter images are the first images to reveal the radiative shell of 3C391. The mid-infrared spectrum is dominated by bright ionic lines and H2 S(2) through S(7). There are no aromatic hydrocarbons associated with the shocks, nor is their any mid-infrared continuum, suggesting that macromolecules and very small grains are destroyed. Comparing 3C391 to the better-studied IC443, both remnants have molecular- and ionic-dominated regions; for 3C391, the ionic-dominated region is the interface into the giant molecular cloud, showing that the main bodies of giant molecular clouds contain significant regions with densities 100 to 1000/cm^3 and a small filling factor with higher-density. The molecular shocked region resolves into 16 clumps of H2 emission, with some fainter diffuse emission but with no associated near-infrared continuum sources. One of the clumps is coincident with a previously-detected OH 1720 MHz maser. These clumps are interpreted as a cluster of pre-stellar, dense molecular cores that are presently being shocked by the supernova blast wave.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0108173
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