ALMA CO Observations of Supernova Remnant N63A in the Large Magellanic Cloud: Discovery of Dense Molecular Clouds Embedded within Shock-Ionized and Photoionized Nebulae
H. Sano, H. Matsumura, T. Nagaya, Y. Yamane, R. Z. E. Alsaberi, M. D., Filipovic, K. Tachihara, K. Fujii, K. Tokuda, K. Tsuge, S. Yoshiike, T., Onishi, A. Kawamura, T. Minamidani, N. Mizuno, H. Yamamoto, S. Inutsuka, T., Inoue, N. Maxted, G. Rowell, M. Sasaki, Y. Fukui

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA and ASTE observations to reveal dense molecular clouds within the supernova remnant N63A in the LMC, showing their interaction with shock waves and implications for cosmic-ray acceleration.
Contribution
First spatially resolved observations of molecular clouds embedded within N63A's shock and photoionized regions, demonstrating their survival and interaction with supernova shock waves.
Findings
Molecular clouds have masses of 800 and 1700 solar masses in different regions.
X-ray absorption indicates clouds are partly in front of the X-ray emitting regions.
Shock-cloud interactions are efficient, affecting cosmic-ray acceleration and gamma-ray emission.
Abstract
We carried out new CO( = 1-0, 3-2) observations of a N63A supernova remnant (SNR) from the LMC using ALMA and ASTE. We find three giant molecular clouds toward the northeast, east, and near the center of the SNR. Using the ALMA data, we spatially resolved clumpy molecular clouds embedded within the optical nebulae in both the shock-ionized and photoionized lobes discovered by previous H and [S II] observations. The total mass of the molecular clouds is for the shock-ionized region and for the photoionized region. Spatially resolved X-ray spectroscopy reveals that the absorbing column densities toward the molecular clouds are - cm, which are - times less than the averaged interstellar proton column densities for each region. This means that the X-rays are produced not…
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