Aps. Crotts et al., THE CIRCUMSTELLAR ENVELOPE OF SN-1987A .1. THE SHAPE OF THE DOUBLE-LOBED NEBULA AND ITS RINGS AND THE DISTANCE TO THE LARGE MAGELLANIC CLOUD, The Astrophysical journal, 438(2), 1995, pp. 724-734
We have used light echoes from the inner few arcseconds of the region
around SN 1987A to define the three-dimensional geometry of its circum
stellar nebula. SN 1987A appears to be surrounded by a double-lobed ne
bula, the waist of which is nearly coincident with the prominent ellip
tical ring, 1.''7 in major axis length, seen prominently in atomic rec
ombination lines. The symmetry axis of this double-lobed structure cor
responds closely to the axis which would also imply that the ring is a
ctually circular and just seen as an ellipse in projection. By confini
ng the range of ring geometries, this supports previously described te
chniques using the Panagia et al. light travel time measurement across
the ring compared to its angular size to produce an estimate the dist
ance to SN 1987A. With corrections for the distance between the SN and
the LMC disk at the end of the galaxy, as well as the correction to t
he center of the LMC caused by the tilt of the galaxy, one can infer a
distance to the LMC of 51.9 +/- 3.1 kpc (or 52.9 +/- 2.6 kpc if one s
imply assumes that the ring is circular). We also note that the red su
pergiant wind contains a density concentration in the ring plane, as a
nticipated by hydrodynamic models for the double-lobed nebula. We put
observational limits on the presence of a companion star which might b
e responsible for these anisotropies. We also discuss implications of
HST WFPC2 observations of recombination radiation from this region.