Na. Levenson et al., ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT - X-RAY AND OPTICAL OBSERVATIONS OF A PROTOTYPICAL CLOUD-BLAST WAVE INTERACTION IN THE CYGNUS LOOP, The Astrophysical journal, 468(1), 1996, pp. 323-329
We use the ROSAT High Resolution Imager and deep, wide-held, optical i
mages to study a section of the western edge of the Cygnus Loop. Fast,
radiative shocks result in a network of bright optical filaments. The
most prominent X-rays are associated with and interior to these optic
al filaments. This X-ray enhancement is due to additional compression
of hot, postshock gas by a reflected shock, which formed when the blas
t wave encountered a large molecular cloud in this region about 10(3)
yr ago. This cloud is traced by far-infrared dust and CO emission that
are concentrated toward the exterior of the bright filaments and exte
nded both along the line of sight and roughly north-south in the plane
of the sky. Farther west, a curved Balmer-dominated filament marks th
e edge of the blast wave, which has begun to wrap around the interveni
ng cloud. The region is seen close to edge on, and this simple geometr
y enables us to determine its physical structure in detail: this is an
example of the early stage of a cloud-blast wave interaction. Because
the cloud is large, the lifetime of the interaction is long compared
with the timescale over which the blast-wave properties (such as press
ure) change, so evolution of the shock during the interaction is impor
tant. Bright optical filaments, associated limb-brightened X-rays, and
fainter Balmer-dominated emission on the exterior of the remnant are
all common around the rim of the Cygnus Loop. These phenomena are the
result of interaction of the supernova blast wave with large clouds. T
he western edge is the prototypical example of the physical processes
occurring throughout this supernova remnant.