The Origin of Kepler's Supernova Remnant
Daniel J. Patnaude, Carles Badenes, Sangwook Park, and J. Martin, Laming

TL;DR
This study models Kepler's supernova remnant to determine its explosion characteristics and circumstellar environment, concluding it likely produced about 1 solar mass of nickel and is situated over 7 kpc away, with evidence of a non-uniform circumstellar medium.
Contribution
The paper presents hydrodynamical and spectral models that constrain the nickel mass and circumstellar environment of Kepler's supernova remnant, suggesting a 1 M_sun nickel yield and a complex circumstellar structure.
Findings
Kepler's SNR likely produced ~1 M_sun of 56Ni.
A simple 1/r^2 wind profile is inconsistent with observations.
A small cavity around the progenitor fits the spectral data.
Abstract
It is now well established that Kepler's supernova remnant is the result of a Type Ia explosion. With an age of 407 years, and an angular diameter of ~ 4', Kepler is estimated to be between 3.0 and 7.0 kpc distant. Unlike other Galactic Type Ia supernova remnants such as Tycho and SN 1006, and SNR 0509-67.5 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, Kepler shows evidence for a strong circumstellar interaction. A bowshock structure in the north is thought to originate from the motion of a mass-losing system through the interstellar medium prior to the supernova. We present results of hydrodynamical and spectral modeling aimed at constraining the circumstellar environment of the system and the amount of 56Ni produced in the explosion. Using models that contain either 0.3 M_sun (subenergetic) or 1 M_sun (energetic) of 56Ni, we simulate the interaction between supernova Ia ejecta and various…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · History and Developments in Astronomy
