Discovery of young, oxygen-rich supernova remnants in PHANGS-MUSE galaxies
Timo Kravtsov (1), Joseph P. Anderson (2), Hanindyo Kuncarayakti (1), Keiichi Maeda (3), Seppo Mattila (1) ((1) University of Turku, (2) European Southern Observatory, (3) Kyoto University)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new spectroscopic method using MUSE data to identify supernova remnants, successfully detecting 307 SNRs including seven oxygen-rich types, thereby expanding the known sample and aiding understanding of their origins.
Contribution
The study presents a novel line-broadening based detection technique for SNRs, especially effective for identifying rare oxygen-rich remnants, increasing the known sample size.
Findings
Detected 307 SNRs, including 7 O-rich SNRs.
O-rich SNRs show broader emission lines and specific oxygen emission features.
Some O-rich SNRs have X-ray and mid-IR counterparts.
Abstract
Context. Supernova remnants (SNRs) are the late stages of supernovae before their merging into the surrounding medium. Oxygen-rich supernova remnants represent a rare subtype with strong visible light oxygen emission. Aims. We present a new method to detect SNRs exploiting the capabilities of modern visible-light integral-field units based on the shapes of the SNR emission lines. Methods. We search for unresolved shocked regions with broadened emission lines using the medium-resolution integral-field spectrograph MUSE on the Very Large Telescope. The spectral resolving power allows shocked emission sources to be differentiated from photoionised sources based on the linewidths. Results. We find 307 supernova remnants, including seven O-rich SNRs. For all O-rich SNRs, we observe the [O III]{\lambda}{\lambda}4959,5007 emission doublet. In addition, we observe emissions from [O…
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