Abstract

view Abstract Citations (177) References (56) Co-Reads Similar Papers Volume Content Graphics Metrics Export Citation NASA/ADS Observational evidence for supernova-induced star formation: Canis Major R1. Herbst, W. ; Assousa, G. E. Abstract Observational evidence is presented which indicates that star formation in the young association CMa R1 was initiated by a supernova explosion (probably of Type II) that occurred about half a million years ago. Palomar Sky Survey prints, neutral-hydrogen maps, and radial-velocity data are examined which show that the CMa R1 association is located on the outer edge of a ring of optical and radio emission, that an expanding neutral-hydrogen shell is coincident with the optical feature, and that HD 54662 is a runaway star in the CMa OB1 association and may be associated with the event that produced the observed supernova remnant. The optical and radio features are interpreted as a supernova remnant with an age of about 500,000 years and an initial outburst energy of the order of 5 by 10 to the 50th power ergs, which is expanding into an initially nonuniform medium characterized by an initial atomic-hydrogen density of approximately 1 per cu cm in the direction toward CMa R1 and less than half that value in the direction toward the sun. Publication: The Astrophysical Journal Pub Date: October 1977 DOI: 10.1086/155596 Bibcode: 1977ApJ...217..473H Keywords: Early Stars; Nebulae; Star Formation; Supernova Remnants; Astronomical Maps; Astronomical Photography; Hydrogen Clouds; Protostars; Ring Structures; Sky Surveys (Astronomy); Stellar Models; Astrophysics full text sources ADS | data products SIMBAD (18)

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