Azimuthal Density Variations Around the Rim of Tycho's Supernova Remnant
Brian J. Williams, Kazimierz J. Borkowski, Parviz Ghavamian, John W., Hewitt, S. Alwin Mao, Robert Petre, Stephen P. Reynolds, John M. Blondin

TL;DR
This study uses infrared imaging and hydrodynamic simulations to analyze density variations around Tycho's supernova remnant, revealing significant ambient density gradients and their effects on remnant morphology and shock dynamics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of azimuthal density variations around Tycho's remnant using IR flux ratios and hydrodynamic models, highlighting a large density gradient in the surrounding ISM.
Findings
Significant azimuthal variations in dust temperature and density around Tycho.
A large ambient density gradient (3-10 times) from NE to SW.
Hydrodynamic models suggest Tycho is at 3-4 kpc with a mean density of ~0.2 cm$^{-3}$.
Abstract
{\it Spitzer} images of Tycho's supernova remnant in the mid-infrared reveal limb-brightened emission from the entire periphery of the shell and faint filamentary structures in the interior. As with other young remnants, this emission is produced by dust grains, warmed to K in the post-shock environment by collisions with energetic electrons and ions. The ratio of the 70 to 24 m fluxes is a diagnostic of the dust temperature, which in turn is a sensitive function of the plasma density. We find significant variations in the 70/24 flux ratio around the periphery of Tycho's forward shock, implying order-of-magnitude variations in density. While some of these are likely localized interactions with dense clumps of the interstellar medium, we find an overall gradient in the ambient density surrounding Tycho, with densities 3-10 times higher in the NE than in the SW. This large…
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