First detection of optical light from SNR G279.0+1.1
M. Stupar, Q.A. Parker

TL;DR
This paper reports the first optical detection of supernova remnant G279.0+1.1 using imaging and spectroscopy, revealing shock-heated filaments and expanding understanding of Galactic remnants through optical observations.
Contribution
It presents the first optical imaging and spectroscopic detection of SNR G279.0+1.1, linking optical filaments with radio data and confirming shock-heated emission.
Findings
Detection of HAlpha filaments within the SNR boundaries.
Strong [S II] emission confirms shock heating.
Spectral lines support SNR classification.
Abstract
This is the initial paper in a series presenting the first optical detections and subsequent follow-up spectroscopy of known Southern Galactic supernova remnants (SNRs) previously discovered in the radio. These new detections come from the AAO/UKST HAlpha survey of the Southern Galactic plane which has opened up fresh opportunities to study Galactic remnants. Here we present the first optical imaging and follow-up spectra of Galactic SNR G279.0+1.1 where a series of 14 small-scale fragmented groups of HAlpha filaments have been discovered in a ~2.3 deg. area centred on G279.0+1.1. Individually they are somewhat inconspicuous but collectively they are completely enclosed within the overall radio contours of this known SNR. Three of these filamentary groupings are particularly prominent and optical spectra have been obtained across two of them. Their morphological structure and spectral…
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