Angular power spectrum of supernova remnants: effects of structure, geometry and diffuse foreground
Samir Choudhuri, Preetha Saha, Nirupam Roy, Somnath Bharadwaj and, Jyotirmoy Dey

TL;DR
This paper investigates how various effects like shell thickness, projection, and diffuse foreground emission influence the observed power spectrum of supernova remnants, using simulations to understand the true turbulence properties.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of how observational effects distort the intrinsic power spectrum of SNRs, aiding in more accurate turbulence characterization.
Findings
Break in power law depends on shell thickness.
Diffuse emission can dominate at small scales.
Steep intrinsic spectra are harder to recover.
Abstract
The study of the intensity fluctuation power spectrum of individual supernova remnants (SNRs) can reveal the structures present at sub-pc scales, and also constrain the physical process that generates those structures. There are various effects, such as the remnant shell thickness, projection of a three-dimensional structure onto a two-dimensional observational plane, and the presence of diffuse "foreground" emission, which causes the observed power spectrum to deviate from the intrinsic power spectrum of the fluctuations. Here, we report results from a systematic study of these effects, using direct numerical simulations, in the measured power spectrum. For an input power-law power spectrum, independent of the power-law index, we see a break in the observed power law at a scale which depends on the shell thickness of a shell-type SNR, and the three-dimensional turbulence changes to…
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