The Distance to SS433/W50 and its Interaction with the ISM
Felix J. Lockman, Katherine M. Blundell, W. M. Goss

TL;DR
This study refines the distance to SS433/W50 using multi-wavelength observations, revealing its interaction with the interstellar medium and suggesting a recent supernova origin with a dense local environment.
Contribution
The paper provides new distance estimates and evidence of ISM interaction for SS433/W50, along with insights into its origin and environment based on HI and CO observations.
Findings
Distance to SS433/W50 is 5.5-6.5 kpc, consistent with light travel-time estimates.
W50's lobes interact with surrounding HI, creating cavities and shells.
SS433 likely originated as a runaway binary ejected from a young cluster.
Abstract
[ABRIDGED] The distance to the relativistic jet source SS433 and the related supernova remnant W50 is re-examined using new observations of HI in absorption from the VLA, HI in emission from the GBT, and 12CO emission from the FCRAO. The new measurements show HI in absorption against SS433 to a velocity of 75 km/s but not to the velocity of the tangent point, which bounds the kinematic distance at 5.5 < d_k < 6.5 kpc. This is entirely consistent with a 5.5 +/- 0.2 kpc distance determined from light travel-time arguments (Blundell & Bowler 2004). The HI emission map shows evidence of interaction of the lobes of W50 with the interstellar medium near the adopted systemic velocity of V_LSR = 75 km/s. The western lobe sits in a cavity in the HI emission near the Galactic plane, while the eastern lobe terminates at an expanding HI shell. The expanding shell has a radius of 40 pc, contains 8…
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