Mapping Cassiopeia A's silicon/sulfur Doppler velocities with XRISM-Resolve
Jacco Vink (1,2), Manan Agarwal (1), Aya Bamba (3,4,5), Liyi Gu (2),, Paul Plucinsky (6), Ehud Behar (7), Lia Corrales (8), Adam Foster (6),, Shin-ichiro Fujimoto (9), Masahiro Ichihashi (3), Kazuhiro Ichikawa (10),, Satoru Katsuda (11), Hironori Matsumoto (12)

TL;DR
This study uses XRISM-Resolve's high spectral resolution to map silicon and sulfur Doppler velocities in Cassiopeia A, revealing complex ejecta motions and ion temperature states with unprecedented detail.
Contribution
First detailed velocity mapping of Si and S in Cas A using XRISM-Resolve, improving understanding of ejecta dynamics and ion temperature distributions.
Findings
Radial velocities generally match previous CCD results.
Two-component Gaussian models reveal distinct redshifted and blueshifted regions.
Line broadening indicates non-equilibrated ion temperatures.
Abstract
Young supernova remnants (SNRs) provide crucial insights into explosive nucleosynthesis products and their velocity distribution soon after the explosion. However, these velocities are influenced by the dynamics of the circumstellar medium (CSM), which originates from the progenitor's late-phase mass loss. Cas A, the youngest known Galactic core-collapse SNR, was studied to analyze the spatial distribution of Si and S radial velocities using two high-spectral resolution observations from the XRISM-Resolve imaging spectrometer.Resolve's capabilities enabled the detailed characterization of Si XIII, Si XIV, S XV, and S XVI lines, whose line shapes can be resolved and modeled using Gaussian radial-velocity components. The radial velocities measured generally align with previous CCD-based results, confirming that they were not artifacts caused by blended lines or ionization variations.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
