Ejection of Fragments in Supernova Explosions
A. Loeb, F.A. Rasio, and J. Shaham

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that fragments observed in the Vela supernova remnant are likely ejected during the neutron star formation process, rather than pre-existing objects, based on their high velocities and shapes.
Contribution
It proposes that the observed high-velocity fragments are newly formed during supernova explosion fragmentation, not pre-existing objects accelerated by other means.
Findings
Fragments have velocities of a few thousand km/s.
Shapes suggest they are wakes from objects ejected during supernova.
Pre-existing objects could not have achieved such velocities.
Abstract
Recent observations by the ROSAT X-ray satellite of the Vela supernova remnant have revealed, in addition to the previously identified compact nebula, a nearly circular emitting region with a radius of about 4 degrees. The Vela pulsar is slightly off the center of this circular region, consistent with its measured proper motion of about 100km/s and an age of about 10^4 yr. The emitting region is bounded by the main supernova shock. Just outside the shock, the X-ray image reveals several well-defined V-shaped features extending radially outwards. These features are most likely wakes produced by objects moving supersonically through the outside medium. The shapes and orientations of the wakes suggest that these objects have been ejected from the center of the supernova explosion. Their present positions indicate that they have been moving with a mean velocity of a few thousand km/s. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics · Astro and Planetary Science
