Two evolved supernova remnants with newly identified Fe-rich cores in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Patrick J. Kavanagh, Manami Sasaki, Luke M. Bozzetto, Sean D. Points,, Evan J. Crawford, John Dickel, Miroslav D. Filipovic, Frank Haberl, Pierre, Maggi, Emma T. Whelan

TL;DR
This study analyzes two evolved supernova remnants in the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing Fe-rich cores indicative of Type Ia origins, and provides detailed multi-wavelength insights into their morphology, composition, and evolutionary state.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of Fe-rich cores in two supernova remnants, expanding the class of evolved Fe-rich remnants and offering detailed multi-wavelength analysis of their properties.
Findings
Both remnants have Fe-rich X-ray cores consistent with Type Ia supernovae.
MCSNR J0506-7025 shows a soft X-ray shell and is in the Sedov phase.
MCSNR J0527-7104 exhibits an elongated ejecta morphology, suggesting breakout into a cavity.
Abstract
Aims. We present a multi-wavelength analysis of the evolved supernova remnants MCSNR J0506-7025 and MCSNR J0527-7104 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Methods. We used data from XMM-Newton, the Australian Telescope Compact Array, and the Magellanic Cloud Emission Line Survey to study their broadband emission and used Spitzer and HI data to gain a picture of their environments. We performed a multi-wavelength morphological study and detailed radio and X-ray spectral analyses to determine their physical characteristics. Results. Both remnants were found to have bright X-ray cores, dominated by Fe L-shell emission, consistent with reverse shock heated ejecta with determined Fe masses in agreement with Type Ia explosion yields. A soft X-ray shell, consistent with swept-up interstellar medium, was observed in MCSNR J0506-7025, suggestive of a remnant in the Sedov phase. Using the spectral fit…
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