The Youngest Galactic Supernova Remnant: G1.9+0.3
S.P. Reynolds, K.J. Borkowski, D.A. Green, U. Hwang, I. Harrus, R., Petre

TL;DR
G1.9+0.3 is the youngest known Galactic supernova remnant, exhibiting rapid expansion, high shock velocities, and the highest electron energies observed in shell remnants, providing insights into early supernova remnant evolution.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed X-ray and radio analysis confirming G1.9+0.3 as the youngest Galactic SNR with extreme electron energies and rapid expansion, highlighting its significance for shock acceleration models.
Findings
G1.9+0.3 is approximately 100 years old.
The remnant's expansion speed is about 14,000 km/s.
It exhibits the highest electron energies recorded for shell SNRs.
Abstract
Our 50 ks Chandra observation of the small radio supernova remnant (SNR) G1.9+0.3 shows a complete shell structure with strong bilateral symmetry, about in diameter. The radio morphology is also shell-like, but only about in diameter, based on observations made in 1985. We attribute the size difference to expansion between 1985 and our Chandra observations of 2007. Expansion is confirmed in comparing radio images from 1985 and 2008. We deduce that G1.9+0.3 is of order 100 years old -- the youngest supernova remnant in the Galaxy. Based on a very high absorbing column density of cm, we place G1.9+0.3 near the Galactic Center, at a distance of about 8.5 kpc, where the mean remnant radius would be about 2 pc, and the required expansion speed about km s. The X-ray spectrum is featureless and well-described by the exponentially cut…
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