A Sino-German λ6\ cm polarization survey of the Galactic plane VI. Discovery of supernova remnants G178.2-4.2 and G25.1-2.3

Abstract

Supernova remnants (SNRs) were often discovered in radio surveys of the Galactic plane. Because of the surface-brightness limit of previous surveys, more faint or confused SNRs await discovery. The Sino-German λ6\ cm Galactic plane survey is a sensitive survey with the potential to detect new low surface-brightness SNRs. We want to identify new SNRs from the λ6\ cm survey map of the Galactic plane. We searched for new shell-like objects in the λ6\ cm survey maps, and studied their radio emission, polarization, and spectra using the λ6\ cm maps together with the λ11\ cm and λ21\ cm Effelsberg observations. Extended polarized objects with non-thermal spectra were identified as SNRs. We have discovered two new, large, faint SNRs, G178.2-4.2 and G25.1-2.3, both of which show shell structure. G178.2-4.2 has a size of 72 arcmin x 62 arcmin with strongly polarized emission being detected along its northern shell. The spectrum of G178.2-4.2 is non-thermal, with an integrated spectral index of α = -0.480.13. Its surface brightness is 1 GHz = 7.2 x 10-23Wm-2 Hz-1 sr-1, which makes G178.2-4.2 the second faintest known Galactic SNR. G25.1-2.3 is revealed by its strong southern shell which has a size of 80 arcmin x 30. It has a non-thermal radio spectrum with a spectral index of α = -0.490.13. Two new large shell-type SNRs have been detected at λ6\ cm in an area of 2200 deg2 along the the Galactic plane. This demonstrates that more large and faint SNRs exist, but are very difficult to detect.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…