Identification of the Central Compact Object in the young supernova remnant 1E0102.2-7219
F.P.A. Vogt, E.S. Bartlett, I.R. Seitenzahl, M.A. Dopita, P., Ghavamian, A.J. Ruiter, J.P. Terry

TL;DR
This paper reports the first identification of a Central Compact Object in the supernova remnant 1E0102.2-7219, revealing an isolated neutron star through combined optical and X-ray observations.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of a neutron star in 1E0102.2-7219 using reprocessed Chandra data and optical spectroscopy, the first such detection outside our galaxy.
Findings
Discovery of a ring-shaped optical structure around the X-ray source.
Measurement of the ring's radius and expansion velocity.
Identification of the X-ray source as an isolated neutron star.
Abstract
Oxygen-rich young supernova remnants are valuable objects for probing the outcome of nucleosynthetic processes in massive stars, as well as the physics of supernova explosions. Observed within a few thousand years after the supernova explosion, these systems contain fast-moving oxygen-rich and hydrogen-poor filaments visible at optical wavelengths: fragments of the progenitor's interior expelled at a few 1000 km/s during the supernova explosion. Here we report the first identification of the compact object in 1E0102.2-7219 in reprocessed Chandra X-ray Observatory data, enabled via the discovery of a ring-shaped structure visible primarily in optical recombination lines of Ne I and O I. The optical ring, discovered in integral field spectroscopy observations from the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) at the Very Large Telescope, has a radius of arcsec =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
