Asymmetric supernova remnants generated by Galactic, massive runaway stars
D. M.-A. Meyer, N. Langer, J. Mackey, P. F. Velazquez, A. Gusdorf

TL;DR
This study models how supernova remnants from runaway stars become asymmetric due to interactions with bow shocks, affecting their evolution, observable emissions, and potential links to known Galactic remnants.
Contribution
It demonstrates that bow shocks from massive runaway stars cause asymmetries in supernova remnants, providing new insights into their evolution and observable features.
Findings
Bow shocks >1.5 Mo cause asymmetry in remnants.
Collision with bow shocks occurs 160-750 yr after supernova.
Remnants are observable in [OIII] emission and soft X-rays.
Abstract
After the death of a runaway massive star, its supernova shock wave interacts with the bow shocks produced by its defunct progenitor, and may lose energy, momentum, and its spherical symmetry before expanding into the local interstellar medium (ISM). We investigate whether the initial mass and space velocity of these progenitors can be associated with asymmetric supernova remnants. We run hydrodynamical models of supernovae exploding in the pre-shaped medium of moving Galactic core-collapse progenitors. We find that bow shocks that accumulate more than about 1.5 Mo generate asymmetric remnants. The shock wave first collides with these bow shocks 160-750 yr after the supernova, and the collision lasts until 830-4900 yr. The shock wave is then located 1.35-5 pc from the center of the explosion, and it expands freely into the ISM, whereas in the opposite direction it is channelled into the…
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