Time Evolution of the Reverse Shock in SN 1006
P. Frank Winkler, Andrew J. S. Hamilton, Knox S. Long, and Robert A., Fesen

TL;DR
This study measures the evolution of the reverse shock in SN 1006 over 10.5 years using UV spectra, confirming that the shock encounters slower ejecta over time and revealing changes in shocked material density.
Contribution
First observational confirmation that the reverse shock in SN 1006 moves inward through slower ejecta, demonstrating dynamic evolution consistent with theoretical predictions.
Findings
The reverse shock material slowed by 44 km/s over 10.5 years.
The column density of shocked Si II decreased by 7%.
The shock is progressing into denser ejecta regions.
Abstract
The Schweizer-Middleditch star, located behind the SN 1006 remnant and near its center in projection, provides the opportunity to study cold, expanding ejecta within the SN 1006 shell through UV absorption. Especially notable is an extremely sharp red edge to the Si II 1260 Angstrom feature, which stems from the fastest moving ejecta on the far side of the SN 1006 shell--material that is just encountering the reverse shock. Comparing HST far-UV spectra obtained with COS in 2010 and with STIS in 1999, we have measured the change in this feature over the intervening 10.5-year baseline. We find that the sharp red edge of the Si II feature has shifted blueward by 0.19 +/- 0.05 Angstroms, which means that the material hitting the reverse shock in 2010 was moving slower by 44 +/- 11 km/s than the material that was hitting it in 1999, a change corresponding to - 4.2 +/- 1.0 km/s/yr. This is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
