Supernova Remnants in the AKARI IRC Survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud
Onaka, Takashi; Ita, Yoshifusa; Seok, Ji Yeon; Koo, Bon-Chul; Lee, Ho-Gyu; Lee, Jae-Joon; Moon, Dae-Sik; Sakon, Itsuki; Kaneda, Hidehiro; Lee, Hyung Mok; Lee, Myung Gyoon; Kim, Sung Eun
South Korea, Japan, United States, Canada
Abstract
We present a near- to mid-infared study of supernova remnants (SNRs) using the AKARI IRC Survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). The LMC survey observed about a10 square degree area of the LMC in five bands centered at 3, 7, 11, 15, and 24 μm using the Infrared Camera (IRC) aboard AKARI. The number of SNRs in the survey area is 21, which is about ahalf of the known LMC SNRs. We systematically examined AKARI images and identified eight SNRs with distinguishable infrared emission. All of them were detected at gsim 10 μm and some at 3 and 7μm, too. We present their AKARI images and fluxes. In the 11 / 15 μm versus 15 / 24 μm color-color diagram, the SNRs appear to be aligned along amodified blackbody curve, representing thermal emission from dust at temperatures of between 90 and 190K. There is agood correlation between the 24 μm and X-ray fluxes of the SNRs. It was also found that there is agood correlation between the 24 μm and radio fluxes even if there is no direct physical connection between them. We considered the origin of the detected mid-infrared emission in individual SNRs. We conclude that the mid-infrared emissions in five SNRs that show morphologies similar to the X-rays are dominated by thermal emission from hot dust heated by X-ray emitting plasma. Their 15 / 24 μm color temperatures are generally higher than the Spitzer 24 / 70 μm color temperatures, which suggests that asingle-temperature dust model cannot describe the full spectral energy distribution (SED) of the SNRs. It also implies that our understanding of the full SED is essential for estimating the dust destruction rate of grains by SNR shocks.