Supernova of 1006 (G327.6+14.6) (2024)

11institutetext: Department of Physics, Faculty of Science & Engineering, Chuo University, 1-13-27 Kasuga, Bunkyo, Tokyo 112-8551, Japan, 11email: katsuda@phys.chuo-u.ac.jp

Satoru Katsuda

Abstract

SN1006 (G327.6+14.6) was the brightest supernova (SN) witnessed in human history. As of one thousand years later, it stands out as an ideal laboratory to study Type Ia SNe and shocks in supernova remnants (SNRs). The present state of knowledge about SN1006 is reviewed in this article. No star consistent with a surviving companion expected in the traditional single-degenerate scenario has been found, which favors a double-degenerate scenario for the progenitor of SN1006. Both unshocked and shocked SN ejecta have been probed through absorption lines in ultraviolet spectra of background sources and thermal X-ray emission, respectively. The absorption studies suggest that the amount of iron is <<0.16 M, which is significantly less than the range for normal SNe Ia. On the other hand, analyses of X-ray data reveal the distribution of shocked ejecta to be highly asymmetric especially for iron. Therefore, most of iron might have escaped from the ultraviolet background sources. Another important aspect with SN1006 is that it was the first SNR in which synchrotron X-ray emission was detected from shells of the remnant, providing evidence that electrons are accelerated up to similar-to\sim100 TeV energies at forward shocks. The bilateral symmetry of the synchrotron emission (bright in northeastern and southwestern limbs) is likely due to a polar cap geometry. The broadband (radio, X-ray, and gamma-ray) spectral energy distribution suggests that the gamma-ray emission is predominantly leptonic. At the northwestern shock, evidence for extreme, but less than mass proportional, temperature non-equilibration has been found by optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray observations.

1 Introduction

SN1006 (G327.6+14.6) was the brightest supernova (SN) recorded in human history. According to various historical records (similar-to\sim30 in total from China, Japan, Korea, Europe, and the Arab world) and their different interpretations, the peak magnitude of SN1006 ranges from 22-2 to 1010-10 (e.g., Stephenson (2010)). Of these, the most straightforward estimate would be 7.37.3-7.3 to 7.67.6-7.6 (Winkler et al. 2003), based on a simple interpretation of the Egyptian astrologer Ali bin Ridwan’s description: “its size 21212\frac{1}{2} to 3 times the magnitude of Venus” and “a little more than a quarter of the brightness of the Moon”. On the other hand, Stephenson (2010) paid more attention to information from China: “It was so brilliant that one could scrutinize things (presumably nearby objects).” Since one can start to discern objects only when the Moon is about five days old (approximate magnitude 8.58.5-8.5 or 99-9) in a clear and very dark sky, he concluded that the peak brightness was around 8.58.5-8.5. Perhaps, a fair estimate would be somewhere between these two plausible evaluations.

Today, it can be observed in many wavelengths as a shell-type supernova remnant (SNR) with a radius of 30, as shown in Fig.1 — a deep X-ray image taken by Chandra in 2012 (Winkler et al. 2014). SN1006 was almost certainly a Type Ia event, based on its location far above the Galactic plane (b=14.6𝑏superscript14.6b=14.6^{\circ} = several hundreds of pc above the Galactic plane at a distance of 1–2 kpc), the lack of both a nearby OB association and a compact remnant, and recorded visibility for nearly two years. By combining the apparent magnitude of 88-8 with the absolute visual magnitude of normal SN Ia (19.1219.12-19.12: Leloudas et al. 2015) and the visual extinction of Av=0.31subscript𝐴v0.31A_{\rm v}=0.31 (Winkler et al. 2003), the distance is estimated to be only 1.45 kpc. It stands out among all historical SNRs as the closest, highest above the Galactic plane and thus least obscured, and largest. It has been an excellent laboratory to study explosion mechanisms and nucleosynthesis of SNe Ia, as well as collisionless shock physics including cosmic ray acceleration.

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2 Searching for a Surviving Companion Star to Constrain a Progenitor System

There is a consensus that SNe Ia originate from thermonuclear explosions of C+O white dwarfs whose masses are close to the Chandrasekhar mass (1.38 M). However, it is not clear how normal C+O white dwarfs, born with similar-to\sim0.6 M, approach the Chandrasekhar mass. There are two main scenarios to increase the white dwarf mass: 1) the merger of two white dwarfs, i.e., the double-degenerate (DD) scenario (Iben & Tutukov 1984), 2) mass accretion from a non-degenerate companion, i.e., the single-degenerate (SD) scenario (Nomoto 1982). The two scenarios predict a testable observational difference; nothing is left behind the explosion in the first channel, while a companion can survive the explosion in the second channel.

Using Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) 4-m telescope, Schweizer & Middleditch (1980) searched for a surviving companion star, and found an unusually hot subdwarf sdOB star (hereafter, the SM star) at 2.5 south from the geometric center of the SNR. Since the distance to this object, 1.10.6+1.4subscriptsuperscriptabsent1.40.6{}^{+1.4}_{-0.6} kpc, was similar to SN1006, they suggested that it may be the surviving companion star. However, Savedoff & van Horn (1982) argued against this interpretation, since the time for a surviving companion to cool to the observed temperature was much longer than the SNR age. Also, the offset of 2.5 from the SNR center indicates a proper motion of similar-to\sim0.15′′ yr-1, which was not detected. Subsequently, using the International Ultraviolet Explore satellite, Wu et al. (1983) discovered broad absorption features corresponding to Fe II and Si II, III, IV in the UV spectrum of the SM star. The large broadening clearly shows that they are not caused by the interstellar medium (ISM) but are due to freely expanding cold SN ejecta. The fact that all of these absorption features have redshifted components means that the SM star should be located behind SN1006, ruling out its physical associated with SN1006. Furthermore, Winkler et al. (2005) found two other background UV sources within SN1006 that show similar broad absorption lines, which means that the SM star is not unique, and thus is undoubtedly not a stellar remnant of SN1006.

Continuous searches for a stellar remnant have failed to detect viable candidates. González-Hernández et al.(2012) found that all subgiants and main-sequence stars down to an absolute magnitude of the Sun (Lsubscript𝐿direct-productL_{\odot}) within a 4 radius of the apparent explosion site do not show any hints of surviving companions, i.e., noteworthy elemental abundances on the surface, radial velocity, and rotation. Kerzendorf et al.(2012) performed a deeper optical survey within a 2 radius, scrutinizing all stars to a limit of 0.5 L(V)subscript𝐿direct-product𝑉L_{\odot}(V) and performed radial velocity measurements of stars down to a limit of similar-to\sim0.1 L(V)subscript𝐿direct-product𝑉L_{\odot}(V) at the distance of SN1006. The brightness limits investigated are well below theoretical expectations of surviving companion stars; giant donors or subgiant/main sequence donors will become similar-to\sim1000 Lsubscript𝐿direct-productL_{\odot} for at least 105 yr (giant donor) or similar-to\sim500 Lsubscript𝐿direct-productL_{\odot} for 1400–11,000 yr, respectively (Marietta et al. 2000). Despite the complete samples, no candidate companion was found. This is in conflict with the SD scenario, and favors the DD scenario or something else such as a spin-up/spin-down SD scenario in which the donor star evolved to a white dwarf before the SN explosion (Hachisu et al. 2012).

3 Spectroscopic Studies of Unshocked and Shocked Ejecta

While detections of the broad UV absorption lines from the SM star revealed that it is not physically related to SN1006 (Wu et al. 1983), these absorption features provide us with an unusual opportunity to probe unshocked ejecta within SNRs. Therefore, extensive observational and theoretical studies have been performed for the SM star.

As shown in Fig.2 upper panels (Hamilton et al. 1997), Fe II absorption lines at 2383 Åand 2600 Åare very broad (±plus-or-minus\pm5000 km s-1), and are centrally symmetric with respect to rest frames, suggesting that they are caused by symmetrically-distributed cold Fe inside the remnant. The Fe II absorption profiles enable us to directly estimate a density profile of the singly-ionized Fe along the line of sight. By integrating the density profile, Hamilton et al.(2007) calculated the mass of Fe+ to be 0.029±plus-or-minus\pm0.004 M, assuming spherical symmetric distribution of cold Fe. Based on the fact that the ionization state of unshocked Fe appears to be quite low (Blair et al. 1996), with Fe+/Fe being inferred to be 0.660.22+0.29subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.290.22{}^{+0.29}_{-0.22}, the total Fe mass was estimated to be 0.0440.013+0.022subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.0220.013{}^{+0.022}_{-0.013} M with a 3σ𝜎\sigma upper limit of 0.16 M. This is inconsistent with the expected presence of several tenths of a solar mass of Fe for normal SNe Ia.

Different from the symmetric profiles of Fe II lines, Si absorption lines are entirely at redshifted velocities. As an example, we show the Si II 1260 Åfeature in Fig.2 lower panel (Hamilton et al. 2007). The absence of the blueshifted Si absorption indicates no cold Si in the near side, suggesting a strong asymmetry in the ambient density along the line of sight in the sense that the far side is particularly tenuous compared with other regions of the remnant (Hamilton et al. 1997). In addition, the sharp red edge at 7070 km s-1 indicates the position of the reverse shock. This edge was later found to be shifting at a rate of 4.2±limit-from4.2plus-or-minus-4.2\pm1.0 km yr-1, suggesting that the reverse shock is entering slower ejecta (Winkler et al. 2011). Hamilton et al.(1997) interpreted that the Si II line consists of both unshocked and shocked Si II, whereas absorption features of Si III and Si IV do not show such a sharp edge, indicating that they arise mostly from shocked Si.

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Apart from the UV spectroscopy used to probe the cold ejecta, X-ray spectroscopy is a strong tool to probe shocked ejecta, if the X-ray spectrum contains prominent line emission. Becker et al.(1980) found that the X-ray spectrum from SN1006 is featureless, which is in sharp contrast to line-dominated spectra seen in other shell-like SNRs such as CassiopeiaA, Tycho, and Kepler. This fact led the authors to suggest that the X-ray emission is predominantly nonthermal. However, later X-ray observations started to show various indications of thermal emission. These include O K-shell lines with the imaging gas scintillation proportional counter (Vartanian et al. 1985), a relatively steep slope of the hard X-ray spectrum compared with typical synchrotron nebula with Tenma (Koyama et al. 1987), and an Fe K-shell lines complex with the Ginga (Ozaki et al. 1994) and the BeppoSAX satellites (Vink et al. 2000). After these studies, the ASCA satellite finally settled the question of the nature of the X-ray emission (Koyama et al. 1995); bright northeastern (NE) and southwestern (SW) limbs are dominated by synchrotron radiation, while the faint interior regions are dominated by thermal emission. Remarkable spectral differences between these two regions can be readily seen in Fig.3 — X-ray spectra from the SW limb (in red) and the interior area (in black) acquired by the Suzaku satellite.

The spectrum from the interior region (black in Fig.3) shows a number of lines from different species as labelled in the figure. Their line center energies as well as the line intensity ratios indicate an extreme non-equilibrium ionization state (Yamaguchi et al. 2008), as is expected from the low environmental densities in the thermal-dominated limbs (Acero et al. 2007; Winkler et al. 2014) as well as nonthermal-dominated limbs (Korreck et al. 2004; Katsuda et al. 2009). Clumpy structures inside or outside the forward shock of the thermal emission suggests that it is dominated by the reverse-shocked SN ejecta rather than the swept-up ISM (Cassam-Chenaï et al. 2008), although some fractions (especially for O and Ne) must be attributed to the swept-up ISM (Winkler et al. 2014). Yamaguchi et al.(2008) and Uchida et al.(2013) measured the relative abundances of shocked ejecta to be consistent with theoretical expectations based on standard SN Ia models. They also found that the distribution of heavier elements, i.e., Si through Fe, is highly asymmetric, biased to the SE quadrant of the remnant, which was confirmed by Chandra and XMM-Newton’s deep followup observations (Winkler et al. 2014; Li et al. 2015). The asymmetry would be caused by either the SN explosion asymmetry or the inhom*ogeneous ambient density. If the former is the case, the deficiency of Fe inferred from UV absorption studies could be resolved; most of Fe would have been ejected toward the SE quadrant where the UV background sources are not present.

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4 Cosmic Ray Acceleration at the Forward Shock

In the early 1950s, detections of nonthermal radio emission from SNRs established that SNRs contain nonthermal, power-law populations of relativistic electrons/positrons with energies of the GeV range. About 40 years later, the ASCA and ROSAT satellites discovered the first nonthermal X-ray emission from the NE and SW limbs of SN1006 (Koyama et al. 1995; Willingale et al. 1996). This was the first evidence that SNR shocks can accelerate electrons up to TeV energies. Since then, SN1006 has been one of the most important SNRs to study cosmic ray acceleration such as mechanisms of diffusive shock acceleration (a widely accepted acceleration process at SNR shocks) and magnetic field amplification.

4.1 Geometry of Synchrotron Emission

The synchrotron surface brightness of SN1006 shows a clear bilateral symmetry that the NE and SW limbs are particularly bright compared with other regions (cf.Fig.1). This indicates that the synchrotron geometry forms either polar caps or an equatorial belt. In the polar cap model, the ambient magnetic field should be aligned NE–SW direction (parallel to the Galactic plane), while in the equatorial belt model it is aligned the SE–NW direction. Since the shock obliquity, i.e., the angle between the shock normal and the magnetic field vector, plays a fundamental role in many aspects of SNR shocks, considerable efforts have been devoted to reveal the synchrotron geometry and the direction of the ambient magnetic field.

It appears that the equatorial belt model was initially considered to be viable than the polar cap model (Fulbright & Reynolds 1990; Reynolds 1996), suggesting a large scale magnetic field aligned SE to NW. However, one problem with this model is that the injection of thermal particles into acceleration is lower in the synchrotron-bright limbs than in the synchrotron-faint limbs, which conflicts to the observations. The injection problem led Völk et al.(2003) to propose that the polar cap model is more reasonable than the equatorial belt model. By performing spatially-resolved spectral analyses of the entire periphery of SN1006 with XMM-Newton data, Rothenflug et al.(2004) found clear azimuthal variations of the cutoff frequency, ranging from 0.1 keV at the synchrotron-bright limbs to 5 keV at synchrotron-faint limbs. The azimuthal variation was confirmed in more detail by followup X-ray observations (Miceli et al. 2009; Katsuda et al. 2010). Such a strong variation can be explained only by the polar cap model, ruling out the equatorial belt model. Another strong azimuthal variation was found in the ratio of radii between the forward shock and the contact discontinuity, based on the X-ray and optical data analyses (Cassam-Chenaï et al. 2008). This is also in favor of the polar cap model. Finally, Bocchino et al.(2011) compared an observed radio morphology at 1 GHz with synthesized radio maps based on 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations, finding that a model assuming quasi-parallel injection efficiency better represents the data than the quasi-perpendicular model.

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Direct estimates of the magnetic-field orientation were performed through radio polarization measurements for the bright lobes (Kundu 1970). These observations consistently measured fractional polarization of 10–20% as well as the orientation of the magnetic field aligned NE to SW. Since this orientation is radial as is generally observed in young SNRs (Dickel & Milne 1976), the result was not conclusive in determining the direction of the magnetic field around SN1006. Reynoso et al.(2013) performed sensitive polarimetric observations of the faint SE and NW limbs for the first time, finding highly polarized (60±plus-or-minus\pm20%) radio emission as well as magnetic fields aligned tangent to the shock fronts as shown in Fig.4. This result strongly suggests that the ambient field is aligned this (SE–NW) direction, and that the bilateral synchrotron morphology is due to the polar cap geometry. Recent 3D MHD simulations of polarized emission in SN1006 also supported the quasi-parallel model (Schneiter et al. 2015).

4.2 Magnetic Field Amplification and Efficient Cosmic Ray Acceleration

It has been believed that SNRs are accelerating cosmic rays up to the “knee”, the slight inflection and steepening around 3×10153superscript10153\times 10^{15} eV. In the frame of the diffusive shock acceleration theory, strong magnetic fields compared with the interstellar value of a few μ𝜇\muG are required for rapid acceleration that allows particles to reach the knee energy.

While magnetic field strengths in SNRs have never been directly measured so far, recent X-ray observations enabled us to indirectly estimate the field strength. For instance, the Chandra X-ray observatory has revealed remarkably narrow synchrotron rims at SNR shells (Bamba et al. 2003). To explain the narrowness, one must either eliminate the radiating particles or drop the magnetic field downstream. The former scenario had been considered from the early studies, in which an electron could only travel a certain distance before loosing its energy due to synchrotron losses. This distance is determined by two competing transport mechanisms: advection (the flow of the plasma) or diffusion (random motion of electrons on the scale of gyroradii). The distances of the advection (ladsubscript𝑙adl_{\rm ad}) and diffusion (ldiffsubscript𝑙diffl_{\rm diff}) are proportional to B1.5νm0.5superscript𝐵1.5superscriptsubscript𝜈m0.5B^{-1.5}\nu_{\rm m}^{-0.5} and B1.5superscript𝐵1.5B^{-1.5}, respectively, where B𝐵B is the magnetic field strength and νmE2Bproportional-tosubscript𝜈msuperscript𝐸2𝐵\nu_{\rm m}\propto E^{2}B is the photon frequency emitted by an electron of energy E𝐸E. By equating max(ladsubscript𝑙adl_{\rm ad}, ldiffsubscript𝑙diffl_{\rm diff}) to rim widths, magnetic fields were estimated to be 14–130 μ𝜇\muG (Ressler et al. 2014, and references therein). Parizot et al.(2006) combined both of the advection and diffusion effects to solve for the post-shock electron distribution, finding a magnetic field of 91–110 μ𝜇\muG. In 2005, Pohl et al.(2005) proposed the second scenario, in which several processes could lead to an exponentially decaying magnetic field downstream that limits the synchrotron distribution. Marcowith & Casse (2010) performed detailed calculations to test the magnetic damping model for SN1006, finding that the data were better explained by the synchrotron-loss scenario than the magnetic damping model. Finally, Ressler et al.(2014) found rapid shrinkage of rim widths with increasing photon energy that is incompatible with the magnetic damping model.

Another observable used to infer the ambient magnetic-field strength is the precursor of either X-ray synchrotron emission and Hα𝛼\alpha emission, whose presence is predicted by the diffusive shock acceleration theory, since accelerated electrons should spend some time ahead of the shock. So far, no firm detection has been reported in SN1006 (Long et al. 2003; Raymond et al. 2007; Winkler et al. 2014). The nondetection has been considered due to amplified magnetic field upstream, since the diffusive scale length decreases with increasing magnetic field (ldiffB1.5proportional-tosubscript𝑙diffsuperscript𝐵1.5l_{\rm diff}\propto B^{-1.5} for Bohm diffusion). By analyzing deep Chandra data of a numerous regions along the NE and SW limbs, Winkler et al.(2014) showed that a precursor must be thinner than similar-to\sim3′′, suggesting that the magnetic field upstream is amplified to at least 45 μ𝜇\muG. In addition, sophisticated nonlinear diffusive shock acceleration theories based on synchrotron losses also found the high magnetic field upstream (downstream) to be 30–40 μ𝜇\muG (90–130 μ𝜇\muG) for a large-scale ambient field of 3 μ𝜇\muG (Berezhko et al. 2003; Morlino et al. 2010).

Year-scale time variabilities of synchrotron X-ray emission were found in RXJ1713.7-3946 (Uchiyama et al. 2007). The time variabilities have been considered to be caused by a largely amplified magnetic field of a level of 1 mG which results in extremely fast cooling/acceleration of high-energy electrons. In contrast to these SNRs, no regions in the NE SN1006 show strong variations in X-ray flux (Katsuda et al. 2010). This seems to suggest low magnetic fields. However, the absence of strong changes does not require a weak magnetic field, since steady-state particle acceleration at the shock, followed by downstream synchrotron losses, result in little flux variability. Thus, this result is not in contradiction with the high magnetic fields inferred from the thin rims and nondetection of synchrotron precursors. The lack of variability may be attributed to the smoothness of the synchrotron morphology, which is different from the small-scale knots in both RXJ1713.7-3946 and CassiopeiaA.

The strongly amplified magnetic field as well as the loss-limited thin rim interpretation support the idea that the maximum energy of high-energy electrons are limited by synchrotron cooling. In addition, Miceli et al.(2013) showed that X-ray spectra from nonthermal limbs can be better explained by the loss-limited model than a simple exponential cutoff model. Importantly, the maximum energy of electrons limited by synchrotron losses implies that the ions, which dominate cosmic rays with a ratio of ion to electron of similar-to\sim70 at Earth around 10 GeV, may be accelerated to higher energies than electrons, since ions are free from synchrotron losses.

That cosmic rays (ions) are efficiently accelerated at SNR shocks, and are not mere test particles but significantly affect shock dynamics should produce some observational signatures (Reynolds 2008). For instance, the deceleration of incoming fluid (in the shock frame), as accelerated particles diffusing ahead are scattered from incoming MHD fluctuations. The incoming gas is gradually slowed, causing (effective) shock compression factor to increase with respect to a test-particle case. This would result in two observational signatures: 1) a concave-up curvature in the accelerated-particle distribution, and 2) shrinkage of the gap between the forward shock and the contact discontinuity (we note, however, that Orlando et al.(2012) argued against this interpretation, claiming that the forward shock–contact discontinuity separation is a probe of the ejecta structure at the time of explosion rather than a probe of the efficiency of cosmic ray acceleration). Indeed, pieces of evidence for the curved synchrotron spectrum have been accumulated by a joint spectral analysis of radio and X-ray data (Allen et al. 2008) as well as broadband (radio, X-ray, and TeV gamma-rays) spectral energy distribution (SED) in a simple leptonic scenario (Acero et al. 2010). Also, small separations between the forward shock and the contact discontinuity is seen all around the remnant, which led Cassam-Chenaï et al.(2008) and Miceli et al.(2009) to argue efficient ion acceleration.

4.3 Gamma-Ray Emission

A direct clue to probing high-energy ions would be to detect MeV-TeV gamma-ray emission from the decay of neutral pions resulting from inelastic collisions between high-energy ions and ambient ions (the hadronic process). It should be noted however, that high-energy electrons can also produce gamma-rays via inverse-Compton upscattering of ambient photons (the leptonic process). Thus, it is important to reveal contributions of both hadronic and leptonic gamma-rays, based on the intrinsic spectral difference of each emission process.

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The High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) collaboration reported the first robust detection of very high-energy (TeV) gamma-rays from SN1006 (Acero et al. 2010). As shown in Fig.5, the morphology of TeV gamma-ray emission strongly correlates with that of synchrotron X-ray emission. The gamma-ray emitting region is compatible with a thin shell, although we should keep in mind that the spatial resolution of HESS (3–6) is too poor to discuss spatial scales down to a few arcminutes. This fact suggests that the gamma-ray emission originates from the accelerated particles at the SNR shock.

The broadband SED was, however, not very helpful to constrain the gamma-ray emission processes, so that a leptonic, hadronic, and their mixture processes could explain the SED. From an astrophysical point of view, the magnetic field downstream must be as low as 30 μ𝜇\muG, in order to produce sufficient gamma-ray flux in the leptonic scenario. Since such a field is much lower than the inference from X-ray observations (Section4.2), Berezhko et al.(2012) to propose that the TeV emission is dominated by the hadronic process. The authors showed that a nonlinear kinetic model, which assumes a uniform high magnetic field of 150 μ𝜇\muG and comparable contributions from leptonic and hadronic processes in the TeV flux, can reasonably explain the broadband spectrum and the radial profile of TeV gamma-ray emission.

Later, Fermi gave tight upper limits in the GeV band (Araya & Frutos 2012; Acero et al. 2015). The revised SED strongly favors the leptonic scenario for the origin of TeV gamma-rays. In this context, we may need to invoke detailed spatial variations in the magnetic field as well as the accelerated particles within SN1006. Petruk et al.(2011) constructed a leptonic model that takes into account detailed distributions of the magnetic field and high-energy particles inside the remnant, and showed that the model can explain not only the SED but also a locally high-magnetic field for the sharpest filaments in a low effective (emissivity-weighted average) magnetic field of 32 μ𝜇\muG.

5 Collisionless Shock Physics

Shock waves are ubiquitous in a wide range of astrophysical sites including the solar wind, stellar wind bubbles, SNRs, and the merging galaxy clusters (Ghavamian et al. 2013, for a recent review). In the Earth’s atmosphere, the dissipation process at shocks is through direct collisions of particles, whereas in the space the density is too low to form collisional shocks, so that the dissipation is via collective interactions between particles and magnetic fields (hence, collisionless shocks). However, dissipation mechanisms in the collisionless shocks have been still poorly understood. For example, while one expects to find a mass-proportional temperature for each particle species, according to the Ranking-Hugoniot relation: kTi=3/16miVs2𝑘subscript𝑇i316subscript𝑚isuperscriptsubscript𝑉s2kT_{\rm i}=3/16m_{\rm i}V_{\rm s}^{2}, where misubscript𝑚im_{\rm i} is the particle mass and Vssubscript𝑉sV_{\rm s} is the shock speed, it has long been known that this relation does not always hold in SNR shocks.

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Measurements of post-shock temperatures have been performed based mainly on optical and UV spectroscopy of narrow filaments tracing the forward shocks in SNRs (the so-called Balmer-dominated filaments). Figure6 left shows the entire SN1006 taken by the 4 m Blanco telescope at the CTIO (Winkler et al. 2014). The brightest optical feature in this remnant is the NW filament which has been an excellent site to investigate parameters of collisionless shocks faster than 2000 km s-1. As shown in Fig.6 right, optical emission from the shock is dominated by Balmer lines of hydrogen rather than forbidden lines of cosmically abundant elements. Each line consists of narrow and broad components: the former is produced when cold neutrals that passed through the shock are excited in the post shock, and the latter is produced when charge-exchange reactions take place between cold neutrals and hot protons and generate a hot neutral population behind the shock. The width of the broad component is proportional to the postshock proton temperature, while the ratio of broad to narrow flux (Ib/Insubscript𝐼bsubscript𝐼nI_{\rm b}/I_{\rm n}) is sensitive to electron-proton temperature equilibration. Ghavamian et al.(2002) measured the FWHM of the Hα𝛼\alpha line and Ib/Insubscript𝐼bsubscript𝐼nI_{\rm b}/I_{\rm n} to be 2290±plus-or-minus\pm80 km s-1 and 0.840.01+0.03subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.030.01{}^{+0.03}_{-0.01}, respectively, which resulted in a shock speed of 2890±plus-or-minus\pm100 km s-1 and an electron-to-proton temperature ratio of <<0.07. Van Adelsberg et al.(2008) revised the shock velocity down to 2100±plus-or-minus\pm80 km s-1, by taking into account that excitation by proton collisions and charge transfer to excited levels favor the high-speed part of the neutral hydrogen velocity distribution. A similar result was reported based on the analysis of VIMOS integral-field unit spectroscopy of the NW filament (Nikolic et al. 2013). In this work, it was also found that broad line widths and Ib/Insubscript𝐼bsubscript𝐼nI_{\rm b}/I_{\rm n} show spatial variations across tens of atomic mean free paths, suggesting presence of suprathermal protons, the potential seed particles for generating high-energy cosmic rays.

At UV wavelengths, Raymond et al.(1995) first detected line emission of He II, C IV, N V, O VI from the NW filament, using the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope. Followup far-UV observations by the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explore with much better spectral resolution revealed line widths for He II, C IV, and O VI to be 2558±plus-or-minus\pm618 km s-1, 2641±plus-or-minus\pm355 km s-1, and 2100±plus-or-minus\pm200 km s-1, respectively. By attributing the velocities to thermal broadening, the temperatures of He II, C IV, and O VI were found to be less than mass proportional by 48%, 18%, and 21%, respectively. This is not easy to understand at the moment, and the roles of density, pressure, magnetic field orientation, velocity, and Mach numbers should be carefully investigated to better determine the ion heating mechanisms.

An X-ray radial profile obtained by the ROSAT High Resolution Imager peaks 8′′ (corresponding to similar-to\sim0.07 pc at a distance of 1.5 kpc) inward from the optical filaments (Winkler & Long 1997). Using higher spatial and spectral resolution data with Chandra, Katsuda et al.(2013) noticed that the offset in the radial profiles differ with energies; the 0.5–0.6 keV peak dominated by O VII is closer to the shock front than that of the 0.8–3 keV emission. Such displacements are likely due to the fact that heavier elements need longer times to reach ionization states where they produce strong X-ray emission. Using the reflective grating spectrometer onboard XMM-Newton, Vink et al.(2003) and Broersen et al.(2013) measured a width of O VII line in a compact knot on the NW filament, finding the velocity to be 1250±plus-or-minus\pm160 km s-1. This is much slower than those of other ions measured by UV and optical wavelengths listed above, which may be explained by either Coulomb equilibration with electrons or contribution from the reverse-shocked SN ejecta or both.

An important by-product from these shock studies is a distance, which can be derived by combining a shock velocity and a proper motion. Using the observed values, Vs=2100±80subscript𝑉splus-or-minus210080V_{\rm s}=2100\pm 80 km s-1 and μ=0.280±0.008′′𝜇plus-or-minus0.280superscript0.008′′\mu=0.280\pm 0.008^{\prime\prime} yr-1 (Winkler et al. 2003), the distance is estimated to be 1.57±plus-or-minus\pm0.07 kpc. This is in rough agreement with a totally independent estimate (1.45 kpc: Section1) based on the peak brightness of SN1006.

6 Conclusions

The present state of knowledge on SN1006 has been reviewed. The main conclusions are summarized below.

  • SN1006 was the brightest SN witnessed in human history. The peak brightness was likely to be around 88-8. Several pieces of circ*mstantial evidence suggest that it was a Type Ia SN. Combining the apparent magnitude with the absolute visual magnitude of normal SN Ia (19.1219.12-19.12) and the visual extinction of Av=0.31subscript𝐴v0.31A_{\rm v}=0.31, we can estimate the distance to be 1.45 kpc.

  • No surviving companion star has been found within 4 of the apparent site of the explosion. This suggests that SN1006 originates from the DD channel rather than the SD channel.

  • A few background UV sources exhibit broad Fe II, Si II, Si III, Si IV absorption lines due to cold ejecta inside the remnant. Theoretical interpretations suggest that the total mass of Fe is less than 0.16 M (assuming a spherical symmetry), which is significantly less than those for normal SNe Ia.

  • X-ray observations revealed that the elemental abundances in the shocked ejecta are consistent with standard theoretical nucleosynthetic models of SNe Ia. The distribution of shocked ejecta (especially Fe) is highly asymmetric, concentrated in the SE quadrant. The deficiency of Fe inferred from the UV absorption lines could be explained by the asymmetric SN explosion, i.e., most of Fe might have been ejected toward the SE quadrant, and escaped from the UV background sources.

  • SN1006 is the first SNR in which synchrotron X-ray emission was detected from the shell of the remnant, providing us with the first evidence that SNR shocks can accelerate electrons up to similar-to\sim100 TeV energies. Thin X-ray synchrotron rims have been best interpreted as a result of rapid synchrotron cooling in a strongly amplified magnetic field downstream. Efficient cosmic ray acceleration is inferred from pieces of observational information including the high magnetic field, a spectral curvature of synchrotron emission, and proximity between the forward shock and the contact discontinuity.

  • The bilateral symmetry of synchrotron emission in both radio and X-ray wavelengths (enhanced in NE and SW limbs) is most likely due to a polar cap geometry, which is strongly supported by recent radio polarization measurements as well as a strong azimuthal variation of the cutoff energy in synchrotron emission.

  • The morphology of TeV emission is similar to that of X-ray synchrotron emission, and the emitting region is compatible with a thin shell. The hard gamma-ray spectrum in the GeV–TeV range suggests that the gamma-ray emission is dominated by a leptonic process at the expense of a low magnetic field of similar-to\sim30 μ𝜇\muG which conflicts to the high field of similar-to\sim100 μ𝜇\muG inferred from X-ray observations. To self-consistently explain the thin X-ray rims and the broadband SED, we may be required to consider detailed distributions of the magnetic field and high-energy particles in the remnant.

  • At the NW filament that traces the forward shock, we observe extreme, but less than mass proportional, temperature nonequilibration among different species (electron, H, He, C, N, and O) behind the shock. According to the most up-to-date shock model, the shock speed and the electron-to-proton temperature ratio can be estimated to be similar-to\sim2100±plus-or-minus\pm80 km s-1 and <<0.07, respectively. The shock speed, combined with a proper motion of the filament, leads to a distance of 1.57±plus-or-minus\pm0.07 kpc. This is in good agreement with that inferred from the SN brightness.

This work is supported by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI Grant Numbers 25800119 and 16K17673.

7 Cross-references

  • Supernovae and supernova remnants

  • Historical Supernovae in the Galaxy from AD1006

  • Historical records of supernovae

  • Supernova of 1054 and its remnant, the Crab Nebula

  • Supernova of 1181 and its remnant, 3C58

  • Supernova of 1572, Tycho’s Supernova

  • Supernova of 1604, Kepler’s Supernova, and its Remnant

  • Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A

  • Possible and Suggested Historical Supernovae in the Galaxy

  • Observational Classification of supernovae

  • Type Ia supernovae

  • Lightcurves powered by radioactivity: Type Ia and Ibc supernovae

  • Evolution of white dwarfs to the Thermonuclear Runaway: the smouldering phase

  • Dynamical Mergers

  • Violent Merges

  • Chandrasekhar mass explosions

  • Nucleosynthesis in thermonuclear supernovae

  • Dynamical Evolution and Radiative Processes of Supernova Remnants

  • Radio emission from Supernova Remnants

  • X-ray Emission Properties of supernova remnants

  • Ultraviolet and Optical Insights into Supernova Remnant Shocks

  • Infrared Emission from Supernova Remnants: Formation and Destruction of Dust

  • Supernova/supernova remnant connection

  • Supernova remnants as clues to supernova progenitors

  • History of using supernovae in cosmology

  • Peak Luminosity-Decline Relationship for Type Ia Supernovae

  • Low-z Type Ia calibration

  • Determination of H0 from supernovae

  • The Infrared Hubble Diagram of Type Ia Supernovae

  • Discovery of cosmic acceleration

  • Confirming cosmic acceleration

  • Effect of supernovae on the local interstellar medium

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Supernova of 1006 (G327.6+14.6) (2024)

FAQs

What is the brightest day ever recorded? ›

SN 1006 was a supernova that is likely the brightest observed stellar event in recorded history, reaching an estimated −7.5 visual magnitude, and exceeding roughly sixteen times the brightness of Venus.

What type of supernova is SN 1006? ›

The new Chandra image provides new insight into the nature of SN 1006, which is the remnant of a so-called Type Ia supernova. This class of supernova is caused when a white dwarf pulls too much mass from a companion star and explodes, or when two white dwarfs merge and explode.

What is the brightest supernova ever seen from Earth? ›

A mammoth star explosion known as SN2016aps, which occurred in a galaxy about 3.6 billion light-years from Earth, is the brightest supernova ever seen, a new study reports.

When did SN 1006 explode? ›

On or around May 1, 1006 A.D., observers from Africa to Europe to the Far East witnessed and recorded the arrival of light from what is now called SN 1006, a tremendous supernova explosion caused by the final death throes of a white dwarf star nearly 7,000 light-years away.

What is the brightest star every night? ›

Sirius, also known as the Dog Star or Sirius A, is the brightest star in Earth's night sky. The name means "glowing" in Greek — a fitting description, as only a few planets, the full moon and the International Space Station outshine this star.

What is the brightest thing at night? ›

The moon (no-brainer)

We have to begin with the moon – the No. 1 brightest nighttime object.

What supernova is closest to Earth? ›

The closest known candidate is IK Pegasi. It is currently estimated, however, that by the time it could become a threat, its velocity in relation to the Solar System would have carried IK Pegasi to a safe distance.

How much TNT is in a supernova? ›

The prodigious amount of energy (approximately 10(51), or approximately 2.5 x 10(28) megatonnes of TNT equivalent) and momentum associated with each supernova may even have helped to shape galaxies as they formed in the early Universe.

Is there a supernova before a black hole? ›

Some massive stars may collapse completely into black holes — without the fanfare of a supernova. This artist's impression shows the binary system VFTS 243, located in the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud.

What is the rarest type of supernova? ›

Calcium-rich supernovae are a rare type of very fast supernova with unusually strong calcium lines in their spectra. Models suggest they occur when material is accreted from a helium-rich companion rather than a hydrogen-rich star.

Is there anything stronger than a supernova? ›

Properties. Hypernovae are thought to be supernovae with ejecta having a kinetic energy larger than about 1045 joule, an order of magnitude higher than a typical core collapse supernova. The ejected nickel masses are large and the ejection velocity up to 99% of the speed of light.

Have humans ever seen a supernova? ›

A supernova occurs on average once every 25 to 100 years in the Milky Way Galaxy. Despite the odds, no supernova in our Galaxy has been observed from Earth since the invention of the telescope. However, one nearby supernova (SN 1987A) has been observed in a neighboring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud.

What galaxy is SN 1006 in? ›

SN 1006 resides within our Milky Way Galaxy. Located more than 14 degrees off the plane of the galaxy's disk, there is relatively little confusion with other foreground and background objects in the field when trying to study this object.

What is the most powerful supernova ever recorded? ›

SN 2016aps (also known as PS16aqy and AT2016aps) is the brightest and most energetic supernova explosion ever recorded. It released more energy than ASASSN-15lh.

What is 570 billion times brighter than the sun? ›

At its peak, ASASSN-15lh was 570 billion times brighter than the Sun, and 20 times brighter than the combined light emitted by the Milky Way Galaxy. The emitted energy was exceeded by PS1-10adi.

What is the brightest on earth? ›

What's the brightest thing in the world? - Quora. A military high energy laser achives a brightnress of up to 1E17 watts per steradian. The sun has a brightness of about 3E25 watts per steradian. A hypernova explosion has a brightness of about 1E40 watts per steradian.

What is the brightest time? ›

Defining brightness as the amount of solar radiation which penetrates to the ground, then the answer is at high noon at all latitudes.

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