Abstract

Abstract The Large Magellanic Cloud supernova remnant J0454-6713 abutting the H ii region N9 has been observed with XMM-Newton. Two groups of lines from Fe xvii account for half the emission and lines from Fe xviii, O vii, and O viii are also clearly detected with the XMM RGS. Isothermal equilibrium fits of the EPIC spectra reproduce the basic spectral form and show little variation throughout the remnant but are insensitive to the lines from the high-temperature ions. These are overwhelmed in the EPIC cameras by the dominant Fe xvii radiation and the EPIC best-fit spectra do not agree with the RGS data. Uncertainties in the atomic data used to determine Fe-line strength present a further complication which inhibits a good EPIC spectral fit. We build a two-temperature model which does fit both RGS and EPIC results and propose that the high-T component is from SN debris and the low from heated material in the H ii region. The high ratio of Fe emission to that from O requires the remnant to be the product of a Type Ia supernova and points to a deflagration–detonation origin. Weak X-ray emission from the N9 superbubble is detected and briefly discussed. The abundance of Ne in N9 material seems higher than average for the LMC in both the superbubble spectrum and the low-temperature component of the remnant RGS spectrum.

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