RXTE Observation of the TYCHO Supernova Remnant
Abstract
SN1006 [4] and Cas A [1, 9] supernova remnants have been shown convincingly to have a hard X-ray power-law continuum. This continuum is thought to be the synchrotron radiation from accelerated electrons of approx. 100 TeV at the shock fronts. Our goal of AO2 RXTE observation is to detect the hard X-ray continuum and to determine the nature of the continuum from Tycho SNR. A detection of a power-law continuum from Tycho SNR can strongly argue for SNRs are the source of cosmic rays with the first order Fermi acceleration as the energizing process. We report the results of our AO2 RXTE 1 x 105 sec observation of Tycho SNR. We detect two components of the X-ray spectrum from Tycho SNR both at better than 3 omega confidence. The best two component models are: bremsstrahlung (kT=2.67 +/- 0.13 keV) + bremsstrahlung (kT=7.07 +/- 2.21/1.72 keV) or bremsstrahlung (kT=2.36 +/- 0.21/0.57 keV) + power-law (gamma=2.58 +/- 0.12/0.09 ). This result is an improvement compaxed with the previous most sensitive X-ray measurements by Ginga which shows Tycho's observed X-ray continuum requires a two-component model to yield acceptable fits with the hard component parameters being highly uncertain. Our RXTE measurements constrain all parameter within 3o, ranges. However, we cannot yet distinguish between thermal and nonthermal models for the hard component. In the followings, we describe what we accomplished in the period covered by the grant proposal.
- Publication:
-
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Report
- Pub Date:
- January 1998
- Bibcode:
- 1998nasa.reptY....T
- Keywords:
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- Supernova Remnants;
- Cosmic Rays;
- Bremsstrahlung;
- Neutron Stars;
- Red Dwarf Stars;
- Electromagnetic Radiation;
- Galactic Radiation;
- Gamma Rays;
- Interstellar Radiation;
- Synchrotron Radiation;
- Continuums;
- Ginga Satellite;
- Shock Fronts;
- Temperature Distribution;
- X Rays;
- White Dwarf Stars;
- Nuclear Particles;
- Astrophysics