On the origin of the jet-like radio/X-ray morphology of G290.1-0.8
Federico Garc\'ia (1,2), Jorge A. Combi (1,2), Juan F., Albacete-Colombo (3), Gustavo E. Romero (1,2), Fabrizio Bocchino (4), Javier, L\'opez-Santiago (5) ((1) IAR-CONICET, Argentina, (2) FCAG-UNLP, Argentina,, (3) CURZA-COMAHUE, Argentina, (4) INAF, Italia, (5) UCM, Espa\~na)

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of the jet-like radio/X-ray morphology of supernova remnant G290.1-0.8, linking its structure to the surrounding interstellar medium and explosion dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of G290.1-0.8's physical conditions and suggests its morphology results from the ambient medium and a bipolar supernova explosion.
Findings
Bright X-ray spots have higher temperatures and are not in ionization equilibrium.
Low-density tube-like structures align with the remnant's symmetry axis.
The morphology is influenced by the interstellar medium's structure and possibly a bipolar explosion.
Abstract
The origin and evolution of supernova remnants of the mixed-morphology class is not well understood. Several remnants present distorted radio or X-ray shells with jet-like structures. G290.1-0.8 (MSH 11-61A) belongs to this class. We aim to investigate the nature of this supernova remnant in order to unveil the origin of its particular morphology. We based our work on the study of the X-ray emitting plasma properties and the conditions imposed by the cold interstellar medium where the remnant expanded. We use archival radio, HI line data and X-ray observations from XMM-Newton and Chandra observatories, to study G290.1-0.8 and its surrounding medium. Spatially resolved spectral analysis and mean photon energy maps are used to obtain physical and geometrical parameters of the source. Radio continuum and HI line maps give crucial information to understand the radio/X-ray morphology. The…
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