Discovery of an Exceptional Optical Nebulosity in the Suspected Galactic SN Iax Remnant Pa 30 Linked to the Historical Guest Star of 1181 CE
Abstract
A newly recognized young Galactic supernova (SN) remnant, Pa 30 (G123.1+4.6), centered on a hot central star with a ~16,000 km s-1 wind velocity, has recently been proposed to be the result of a double-degenerate merger leading to an SN Iax event associated with the guest star of 1181 CE. Here we present deep optical [S II] λλ6716,6731 images of Pa 30 that reveal an extraordinary and highly structured nebula 170″ in diameter with dozens of long (5″-20″), radially aligned filaments with a convergence point near the hot central star. Optical spectra of filaments indicate a peak expansion velocity ≃1100 km s-1 with electron densities of ≤100-700 cm-3 and a thick shell-like structure resembling its appearance in 22 μm WISE images. No Hα emission was seen ([S II] λ6716/Hα >5), with the only other line emission detected being faint [Ar III] λ7136, suggesting a S- and Ar-rich but H-poor remnant. The nebula's angular size, estimated 2.3 kpc distance, and 1100 km s-1 expansion velocity are consistent with an explosion date around 1181 CE. The remnant's unusual appearance may be due to the photoionization of wind-driven ejecta due to clump-wind interactions caused by the central star's high-luminosity wind.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- March 2023
- DOI:
- 10.3847/2041-8213/acbb67
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2301.04809
- Bibcode:
- 2023ApJ...945L...4F
- Keywords:
-
- Type Ia supernovae;
- Supernova remnants;
- Emission nebulae;
- Spectroscopy;
- Circumstellar matter;
- 1728;
- 1667;
- 461;
- 1558;
- 241;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 9 pages, 5 figures