Teleios (G305.4-2.2) -- the mystery of a perfectly shaped new Galactic supernova remnant
Miroslav D. Filipovic, Zachary J. Smeaton, Roland Kothes, Silvia, Mantovanini, Petar Kostic, Denis Leahy, Adeel Ahmad, Gemma E. Anderson,, Miguel Araya, Brianna Ball, Werner Becker, Cristobal Bordiu, Aaron C., Bradley, Robert Brose, Christopher Burger-Scheidlin, Shi Dai, Stefan

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a highly symmetrical, radio-only Galactic supernova remnant named Teleios, analyzing its properties, possible origins, and evolutionary stage, but leaves the exact supernova type unresolved.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed radio-continuum analysis of Teleios, a uniquely symmetrical SNR, and explores multiple scenarios for its distance, age, and explosion type.
Findings
Teleios is one of the most circular Galactic SNRs known.
It has a steep spectral index of -0.6±0.3 and low surface brightness.
Possible distances are ~2.2 kpc or ~7.7 kpc, indicating different ages.
Abstract
We present the serendipitous radio-continuum discovery of a likely Galactic supernova remnant (SNR) G305.4-2.2. This object displays a remarkable circular symmetry in shape, making it one of the most circular Galactic SNRs known. Nicknamed Teleios due to its symmetry, it was detected in the new Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) radio-continuum images with an angular size of 1320"x1260" and PA = 0 deg. While there is a hint of possible H and gamma-ray emission, Teleios is exclusively seen at radio-continuum frequencies. Interestingly, Teleios is not only almost perfectly symmetric, but it also has one of the lowest surface brightnesses discovered among Galactic SNRs and a steep spectral index of . Our estimates from HI studies and the Sigma-D relation place Teleios as a type Ia SNR at a distance of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
