Investigating Unusual H$\alpha$ Features towards the Scutum Supershell
R. Alsulami, S. Einecke, G. P. Rowell, P. K. McGee, M. D. Filipovi\'c,, I. R. Seitenzahl, M. Stupar, T. Collins, Y. Fukui, and H. Sano

TL;DR
This study examines unusual H-alpha features near the Scutum Supershell, combining multi-wavelength observations and simulations to explore their morphology, excitation mechanisms, and possible origins from supernova-driven outflows.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of the H-alpha features and proposes a connection to supernova events, including a potential link to a hypernova origin.
Findings
H-alpha features resemble a spine ending in a bow-shock morphology
Shock heating may excite the observed emissions
Supernova events could drive similar outflow features
Abstract
We investigate the unusual H features found towards the Scutum Supershell via recent arc-minute and arc-second resolution imaging. These multi-degree features resemble a long central spine ending in a bow-shock morphology. We performed a multi-wavelength study in [SII] optical, radio continuum, infrared continuum, HI, CO, X-ray and gamma-ray emissions. Interestingly, we found the Galactic worm GW16.93.8 HI feature appears within the Scutum Supershell, and likely influences the spine morphology. Furthermore, the rightmost edge of the bow-shock H emission overlaps with [S II] line emission, 4.85 GHz radio, and both 60m and 100m infrared continuum emissions, suggesting some potential for excitation by shock heating. We estimated the photo-ionisation from O-type and B-type stars in the region (including those from the OB associations Ser OB1B, Ser OB2 and Sct…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParallel Computing and Optimization Techniques
