Nonuniform Expansion of the Youngest Galactic Supernova Remnant G1.9+0.3
K. J. Borkowski, S. P. Reynolds, D. A. Green, U. Hwang, R. Petre, K., Krishnamurthy, R. Willett

TL;DR
This study measures the nonuniform expansion of supernova remnant G1.9+0.3 using Chandra X-ray data, revealing significant deceleration and asymmetry, which provides insights into its age, environment, and explosion dynamics.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed measurement of nonuniform expansion in G1.9+0.3, highlighting the deceleration of the blast wave and reverse shock, and discusses implications for supernova models and ambient medium interactions.
Findings
Expansion rates decrease radially by about 60%.
Remnant age estimated at 120-190 years.
Blast wave shows significant deceleration.
Abstract
We report measurements of X-ray expansion of the youngest Galactic supernova remnant, G1.9+0.3, using Chandra observations in 2007, 2009, and 2011. The measured rates strongly deviate from uniform expansion, decreasing radially by about 60% along the X-ray bright SE-NW axis from 0.84% +/- 0.06% per yr to 0.52% +/- 0.03% per yr. This corresponds to undecelerated ages of 120-190 yr, confirming the young age of G1.9+0.3, and implying a significant deceleration of the blast wave. The synchrotron-dominated X-ray emission brightens at a rate of 1.9% +/- 0.4% per yr. We identify bright outer and inner rims with the blast wave and reverse shock, respectively. Sharp density gradients in either ejecta or ambient medium are required to produce the sudden deceleration of the reverse shock or the blast wave implied by the large spread in expansion ages. The blast wave could have been decelerated…
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