Abstract

Hubble Space Telescope images with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 of the young, oxygen-rich, Crab-like supernova remnant SNR0540-69.3 in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) reveal details of the emission distribution and the relationship between the expanding ejecta and synchrotron nebula. The emission distributions appear very similar to those seen in the Crab nebula, with the ejecta located in a thin envelope surrounding the synchrotron nebula. The [O III] emission is more extended than other tracers, forming a faint skin around the denser filaments and synchrotron nebula, as also observed in the Crab. The [O III] exhibits somewhat different kinematic structure in long-slit spectra, including a more extended high-velocity emission halo not seen in images. Yet even the fastest expansion speeds in SNR 0540 s halo are slow when compared to most other young supernova remnants, though the Crab nebula has similar slow expansion speeds. We show a striking correspondence between the morphology of the synchrotron nebula observed in an optical continuum filter with that recently resolved in Chandra X-ray images. We argue that the multi-component kinematics and filamentary morphology of the optical emission-line features likely result from magnetic Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities that form as the synchrotron nebula expands and sweeps up ejecta, as seen in the Crab nebula. Our images and spectra help to refine our understanding of SNR 0540 in several more detailed respects: they confirm the identification of H(alpha)+[N II] in the red spectrum, they show that the systemic velocity of SNR 0540 is not significantly different from that of the LMC, and they hint at a lower Ne abundance than the Crab (potentially indicating a more massive progenitor star).

Highlights

  • The young supernova remnant 0540À69.3 (SNR 0540) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) ranks as one of the most interesting objects in the small class of young, oxygen-rich remnants

  • We report the results of our Hubble Space Telescope (HST ) Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 ( WFPC2) imaging program, showing that the comparison to the Crab Nebula is strengthened through new details revealed in the high-resolution images

  • To build the larger image mosaics of the entire WFPC2 field of view, we rotated each individual chip and aligned them using the 1999 F547M image as reference. We found in this program and a complementary WFPC2 imaging program of the Cas A SNR ( Fesen et al 2001) that using the Space Telescope Science Data Analysis System (STSDAS) task wmosaic yielded measurable errors in the interchip rotations and

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The young supernova remnant 0540À69.3 (SNR 0540) in the LMC ranks as one of the most interesting objects in the small class of young, oxygen-rich remnants. Serafimovich et al (2004) performed a detailed analysis of the pulsar PSR B0540À69.3 astrometry and flux using images from the current data set They measured the pulsar spectral energy distribution in the optical by meticulously accounting for the contribution of the pulsar wind nebula ( PWN ) to flux measurements of the pulsar. Serafimovich et al showed that with significant care in accounting for the nebular contribution, the pulsar optical spectral energy distribution follows a power law with negative slope (F / À ; 1⁄4 1:07) and is steeper than that deduced from previous ground-based optical measurements. 1999 Oct 7 1995 Oct 19 1995 Oct 19 1999 Oct 17 1999 Oct 17 1999 Oct 17 1995 Oct 19 1999 Oct 17 a Values for the mean wavelength and effective filter bandpass width are taken from the Cycle 10 WFPC2 Instrument Handbook

OBSERVATIONS AND DATA REDUCTION
WFPC2 IMAGING OF THE NEBULAR COMPONENT
LONG-SLIT SPECTROSCOPY
The Systemic Velocity
Kinematics
Comments on the Spectrum of SNR 0540
DISCUSSION
Presupernova Circumstellar Ejecta?
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