Abstract

High-resolution X-ray and radio images of the galactic supernova remnant G27.4+0.0 are presented. The X-ray image reveals a centrally located compact source of emission which accounts for 25 percent + or - 2 percent of the emission. The rest of the emission is found in diffuse patches defining a circle of diameter 4 arc min. The radio image is an incomplete shell of comparable diameter with no apparent counterpart to the compact X-ray source. The X-ray luminosity of the supernova remmant implied by the distance of 26 kpc inferred from the Sigma-D relationship exceeds that of any known remnant. This fact, plus the relatively low X-ray absorption, suggests that the remnant is substantially closer than 26 kpc. No X-ray variability of the central source has been detected to a level of 50 percent on time scales of about 1 year, and no periodicity in the range 0.0001-100 Hz to a limit of 16 percent was detected. If G27.4 +0.0 is within a few kiloparsecs, the central source is most likely to be an accretion-powered X-ray binary.

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