Spatially Resolved Chandra Spectroscopy of the Large Magellanic Cloud Supernova Remnant N132D
Abstract
We perform detailed spectroscopy of the X-ray-brightest supernova remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), N132D, using Chandra archival observations. By analyzing the spectra of the entire well-defined rim, we determine the mean abundances for O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, and Fe for the local LMC environment. We find evidence of enhanced O on the northwestern and S on the northeastern blast wave. By analyzing spectra interior to the remnant, we confirm the presence of a Si-rich, relatively hot plasma (≳1.5 keV) that is also responsible for the Fe K emission. Chandra images show that the Fe K emission is distributed throughout the interior of the southern half of the remnant but does not extend out to the blast wave. We estimate the progenitor mass to be 15 ± 5 M⊙ using abundance ratios in different regions that collectively cover a large fraction of the remnant, as well as from the radius of the forward shock compared with models of an explosion in a cavity created by stellar winds. We fit ionizing and recombining plasma models to the Fe K emission and find that the current data cannot distinguish between the two, so the origin of the high-temperature plasma remains uncertain. Our analysis is consistent with N132D being the result of a core-collapse supernova in a cavity created by its intermediate-mass progenitor.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- May 2020
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2004.07366
- Bibcode:
- 2020ApJ...894..145S
- Keywords:
-
- Core-collapse supernovae;
- Interstellar medium;
- X-ray observatories;
- X-ray astronomy;
- Plasma astrophysics;
- Shocks;
- Interstellar abundances;
- Metallicity;
- Large Magellanic Cloud;
- High resolution spectroscopy;
- 304;
- 847;
- 1819;
- 1810;
- 1261;
- 2086;
- 832;
- 1031;
- 903;
- 2096;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena;
- Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
- E-Print:
- 32 pages, 28 figures, 10 tables, accepted for ApJ