Detections of X-ray emissions from Type Ia Supernova 2003lx
Abstract
We present a study of a young (few years old) supernova remnant 2003lx which was first discovered in X-ray through two serendipitous Swift observations in 2008 January and the corresponding merged image revealed a 7σ source detection at 2.11.2 arcsec (0.9 +/- 0.5 Swift pixels) from the optical position of the supernova. The X-ray luminosity $Lx = 4.8-1.7+1.8 × 1041 erg/s of band 0.3 - 2.0 keV is estimated by a redshift z = 0.0377 power law which can infer a companion star with a mass-loss rate of M ~ 10-4 M per year (with assumption of wind velocity vw = 10 km/s) in the white dwarf binary system. Thermal Model fitting suggests the temperature of the shock wave front is kT ~ 0.4 keV which is consistent with the typical reverse shock temperate. The X-ray emission allows us to probe the interaction between the fast moving debris of the exploded star and the circumstellar medium (CSM). This in turns provides footprints of the mass-loss history of the exploded system, and may allow us to learn about the nature of the progenitor and its companion.
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