A Catalogue of Galactic Supernova Remnants: Documentation
2024 October version
D. A. Green
Cavendish Laboratory
19 J. J. Thomson Avenue
Cambridge CB3 0HE
United Kingdom
Contents of this document.
Other pages.
- The catalogue home page.
- The summary listings of all 310 SNRs.
- The detailed listings of all 310 SNRs.
- A list of other names for Galactic
SNRs.
- The abbreviations for journals/telescopes
used in the detailed listings and the documentation.
- A frames interface to the catalogue.
- A list of possible and probable remnants.
- Various .pdf versions of the
catalogue for downloading and printing.
This catalogue of Galactic supernova remnants (SNRs) is an updated
version of those presented in detail in Green (1984, 1988) and in
summary form in Green (1991, 1996, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2019), hereafter
Versions I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII and VIII respectively. Detailed
versions – dated 2004 January, 2009 March, 2014 May and 2019 June,
corresponding to Versions V, VI, VII and VIII respectively – were made
available on the web. Additionally, detailed web versions of 1995 July,
1996 August, 1998 September, 2000 August, 2001 December, 2004 January,
2006 April, 2009 March, 2017 June and 2022 December were produced.
(Version IV, although published in 1996, was produced in 1993, and a
detailed version of this was made available on the Web in 1993
November). The summary data from the 2001 December version of the
catalogue was also published as an Appendix in Stephenson & Green
(2002).
This, the 2024 October version of the catalogue contains 310 SNRs
(which is 7 more than in the previous version; 7 remnants have
been added, no objects have been removed), with over three thousand
references in the detailed listings, plus notes on many possible or
probable remnants. For each remnant in the catalogue the following
parameters are given.
- Galactic Coordinates of the remnant. These are
quoted to a tenth of a degree, as is conventional. In this catalogue
additional leading zeros are not used. These are generally taken from
the Galactic coordinate based name used for the remnant in the
literature. It should be noted that when these names were first defined,
they may not follow the IAU
recommendation
that coordinates should be truncated, not rounded to construct such names.
- Other Names that are commonly used for the
remnant. Note that these are given in parentheses if the remnant is only
a part of the source. For some well known remnants – e.g.
G184.6−5.8 (=Crab nebula) – not all common names are given.
- Right Ascension and Declination of J2000.0
equatorial coordinates the source centroid. The accuracy of the quoted
values depends on the size of the remnant. For small remnants they are
to the nearest few seconds of time and the nearest minute of arc
respectively, whereas for larger remnants they are rounded to coarser
values, but are in every case sufficient to specify a point within the
boundary of the remnant. These coordinates are usually deduced from
radio images rather than from X-ray or optical observations.
- Angular Size of the remnant, in arcminutes. This
is usually taken from the highest resolution radio image available. The
boundary of most remnants approximates reasonably well to a either
circle or to an ellipse. A single value is quoted for the angular size
of the more nearly circular remnants, which is the diameter of a circle
with an area equal to that of the remnant. For more elongated remnants
the product of two values is given, which are the major and minor
diameters of the remnant boundary modelled as an ellipse. In a small
number of cases an ellipse is not a good description of the boundary of
the object (which will be noted in the description of the object given
in its catalogue entry), although an angular size is still quoted for
information. For ‘filled-centre’ type remnants (see below), the size
quoted is for the largest extent of the observed emission, not, as at
times has been used by others, the half-width of the centrally
brightened peak.
- Flux Density of the remnant at a frequency of
1 GHz, in jansky. This is not a measured value, but is instead
derived from the observed radio spectrum of the source. The frequency of
1 GHz is chosen because flux density measurements are usually available
at both higher and lower frequencies. Some young remnants – notably
G111.7−2.1 (=Cassiopeia A) and G184.6−5.8 (=Crab
Nebula) – show secular variations in their radio flux density. From
Version VIII of the catalogue the 1-GHz flux densities for
G111.7−2.1 and G184.6−5.8 have been taken from Perley &
Butler (2017), for an epoch of 2016.
- Spectral Index of the integrated radio emission
from the remnant,
α (here defined in the sense, S ∝
ν−α, where S is the
flux density at a frequency ν),
either a value that is quoted in the literature, or one deduced from the
available integrated flux densities of the remnant. For several SNRs a simple
power law is not adequate to describe their radio spectra, either because there
is evidence that the integrated spectrum is curved or the spectral index varies
across the face of the remnant. In these cases the spectral index is given as
‘varies’ (refer to the description of the remnant and appropriate references in
the detailed catalogue entry for more information). In some cases, for example
where the remnant is highly confused with thermal emission, the spectral index
is given as ‘?′ since no value can be deduced with any confidence.
- Type of the SNR: ‘S’ or ‘F’ if the remnant shows
a ‘shell’ or ‘filled-centre’ structure, or ‘C’ if it shows ‘composite‘
(or ‘combination’) radio structure, with a combination of shell and
filled-centre characteristics. If there is some uncertainty, the type is
given as ‘S?′, ‘F?′ or ‘C?′, or as ‘?′ in several cases where an object
is conventionally regarded as an SNR even though its nature is poorly
known or it is not well-understood. Until recently only a few remnants
were classified as composite remnants, as available observations were
only able to identify the more obvious pulsar-powered, flatter radio
spectrum filled-centre components within shells. However, in recent
years improved observations – particularly in X-rays with the Chandra
satellite – have identified many faint, pulsar powered nebulae in what
until then had been identified as pure shell remnants. (Note: the term
‘composite’ has been used, by some authors, in a different sense, to
describe remnants with radio shell and centrally-brightened X-ray
emission. An alternative term used to describe such remnants is ‘mixed
morphology’, see Rho & Petre 1998.)
In the detailed listings, for each remnant, notes on a
variety of topics are given. First, it is noted if other Galactic
coordinates have at times been used to label it (usually before good
observations have revealed the full extent of the object), if the SNR is
thought to be the remnant of a historical SN, or if the nature of the
source as an SNR has been questioned (in which case an appropriate
reference is usually given later in the entry). Brief descriptions of
the remnant from the available radio, optical and X-ray observations as
applicable are then given, together with notes on available distance
determinations, and any point sources or pulsars in or near the object
(although they may not necessarily be related to the remnant). Finally,
appropriate published references to observations are given for each
remnant, complete with journal, volume, page, and a short description of
what information each paper contains (for radio observations these
include the telescopes used, the observing frequencies and resolutions,
together with any flux density determinations). These references are
not complete, but cover representative and recent observations of
the remnant – up to the end of 2023 in this version of the catalogue –
and they should themselves include references to earlier work. Results
from the primary literature should be used for any detailed quantitative
studies.
The references do not generally include large observational surveys. Of
particular interest in this respect are:
the Effelsberg 100-m survey at 2.7 GHz of the Galactic plane 358°
≤ l ≤ 240°, |b| ≤ 5° by Reich et al. (1990) and
Fürst et al. (1990a); reviews of the radio spectra of some SNRs by
Kassim (1989), Kovalenko, Pynzar’ & Udal’tsov (1994) and Trushkin
(1998); the Parkes 64-m survey at 2.4 GHz of the Galactic plane
238° < l < 365°, |b| < 5° by Duncan et al.
(1995) and Duncan et al. (1997); the Molonglo Galactic plane survey at
843 MHz of 245° < l < 355°, |b| < 1.°5 by Green
et al. (1999); the survey of 345° < l < 255°, |b| <
5° at 8.35 and 14.35 GHz by Langston et al. (2000); the
Multi-Array Galactic Plane Imaging Survey
(MAGPIS),
see White, Becker & Helfand (2005) and Helfand et al. (2006); the VLA
Galactic Plane Survey, see Stil et al. (2006); the GLOSTAR Galactic
radio survey of the region 358° ≤ l ≤ 60°, |b| ≤
1°, see Dokara et al. (2021);
the survey of HI emission towards SNRs by Koo & Heiles (1991); the
study of possible molecular cloud associations with SNRs, in the region
1° ≤ l ≤ 230°, |b| ≤ 5.°5) by Zhou et al.
(2023);
surveys of IRAS observations of SNRs and their immediate surroundings by
Arendt (1989) and by Saken, Fesen & Shull (1992); various Spitzer
surveys of inner galaxy (Reach et al. 2006; Carey et al. 2009; Pinheiro
Gonçalves et al. 2011); the catalogue by Fesen & Hurford (1996) of
UV/optical/infrared lines identified in SNRs;
references to the first Fermi SNR catalogue (Acero et al. 2016) are
included for the 30 ‘Classified Candidates’ and 14 ‘Marginally
Classified Candidates’ remnants listed in Table 1, but not for the other
remnants with non-detection; the H.E.S.S. high energy γ-ray
Galactic plane survey (H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla et al. 2018a) and the
4th Fermi LAT Catalogue (Abdollahi et al. 2020).
See also Ferrand & Safi-Harb (2012), who present a catalogue of
X-/γ-ray observations of Galactic SNRs, updates of which are
available
online.
The catalogue is available as a summary listing
of the parameters for each remnant, and as
detailed listings (with references) for each
object. See also the list of
other names used for these SNRs, and
the list of abbreviations for journals,
proceedings and telescopes used in the detailed listings.
Plus there is a list of the many possible and
probable SNRs reported in the literature (see Section
2.3).
In the detailed listings for each remnant links are provided to the
‘Astrophysics Data
System’ (ADS) for (i) each reference, and (ii) by hovering over the
Galactic coordinate based name, or any other names, for title / keyword
/ abstract and fulltext searches.
The following objects, which were listed in Version I of the
catalogue were removed because they were no longer thought to be
remnants, or were poorly observed (see Version II for references and
further details): G2.4+1.4 (see also Gray 1994a; Goss & Lozinskaya
1995; Polcaro et al. 1995, Prajapati et al. 2019, Green 2022),
G41.9−4.1 (=CTB 73, PKS 1920+06), G47.6+6.1 (=CTB 63),
G53.9+0.3 (part of HC40), G93.4+1.8 (=NRAO 655), G123.2+2.9,
G194.7+0.4 (the Origem Loop, but see below for more recent work),
G287.8−0.5 (see below), G322.3−1.2 (=Kes 24) and G343.0−6.0
(but note that G343.0−6.0 was subsequently reinstated into the
catalogue, due to improved observations, see below). Note that
subsequently Leahy, Tian & Wang (2008) again proposed that a large
(about 0.°5) radio shell, G53.9+0.2, as a possible old SNR. As
noted above, this feature was included, as G53.9+0.3 (part of HC40),
in Version I of the catalogue, but was subsequently removed, following
the discussions of Caswell (1985) who concluded is was a thermal source
(see also Velusamy, Goss & Arnal 1986; Zychová & Ehlerová 2016;
Driessen et al. 2018).
G350.1−0.3 was removed from Version III of the catalogue, as
observations by Salter et al. (1986) did not allow a clear
identification of the nature of this source (but, due improved
observations it was subsequently reinstated into the catalogue, see
below).
G358.4−1.9, which was listed in Version IV of the catalogue, was
removed, as following the discussion of Gray (1994a), as it is not clear
that this is a SNR.
G240.9−0.9, G299.0+0.2 and G328.0+0.3, which were listed in 1995
July version of the catalogue, were removed from the 1996 August
version, following the improved observations of Duncan et al. (1996) and
Whiteoak & Green (1996).
For the 1998 September revision of the catalogue G350.0−1.8 was
incorporated into G350.0−2.0, and G337.0−0.1 refers to a
smaller remnant than that previously catalogued with the same
name.
G112.0+1.2, G117.4+5.0, G152.2−1.2 and G211.7−1.1 – which were
reported as SNRs by Bonsignori-Facondi & Tomasi (1979) – were removed
from the 2001 December version of the catalogue, as the first three of
these are not confirmed as SNRs from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey
(Roland Kothes, private communication).
G10.0−0.3, which was regarded as a remnant – possibly associated with
a soft-gamma repeater – was removed from the 2004 January version of
the catalogue, as it is now thought to be radio nebula powered by a
stellar wind (see Gaensler et al. 2001, Corbel & Eikenberry 2004, and
references therein).
G166.2+2.5 (=OA 184) was removed from the 2006 April version of the
catalogue, as it was identified as an HII region by Foster et al.
(2006).
G84.9+0.5 was removed from Version VI of the catalogue, as it
was identified as an HII region by Foster et al. (2007), see also
Kothes et al. (2006).
G16.8−1.1 was removed from Version VII of the
catalogue (Sun et al. 2011; Stupar & Parker 2011).
G192.8−1.1 was removed from the 2017 June version of the catalogue, as
Gao et al. (2011) had shown this is not a SNR (Kang, Koo & Byun 2014).
It was erroneously not removed in Version VII of the catalogue.
Five entries (G20.4+0.1, G21.5−0.1, G23.6+0.3, G59.8+1.2 and
G65.8−0.5) were removed from Version VIII of the catalogue, as
Anderson et al. (2017), based on THOR and VGPS radio and IR survey
observations, concluded they are not SNRs, but have been confused with
HII regions. Anderson et al. also identified one other entry,
G54.1+0.3 as not being a SNR. This used to be in the catalogue as
a filled-centre remnant, as it shows a centrally brightened morphology
in radio and X-ray observations, and contains a pulsar. It was
reclassified as somewhat larger possible composite remnant when a
larger, faint X-ray emission was identified, from which radio emission,
with polarised loops was subsequently found. Thus G54.1+0.3 was
retained in the catalogue as a composite remnant because of its X-ray
and polarised radio emission, although it may be an isolated PWN.
In the 2022 December version of the catalogue five entries were removed
as they were identified as HII regions rather than SNRs: G11.1−1.0
and G16.4−0.5 (Gao et al. 2019), G8.3−0.0 (Hurley-Walker et al.
2019a), G10.5−0.0 and G14.3+0.1 (Dokara et al. 2021). Dokara et al.
also identified G11.1−1.0 as an HII region, and questioned the
identification of G6.1+0.5 as a SNR. Gao et al. and Hurley-Walker
et al. also identified G20.4+0.1 as an HII region, but this source
had already been removed from Version VIII of the catalogue.
The following objects, which have been reported as SNRs, but have not
been included in any of the versions of the SNR catalogue, have
subsequently been shown not to be SNRs.
- G70.7+1.2, which was reported as a SNR by Reich
et al. (1985), but this has not been confirmed by later observations
(see Green 1986; de Muizon et al. 1988; Becker & Fesen 1988; Bally
et al. 1989; Kulkarni et al. 1992; Phillips, Onello & Kulkarni 1993;
Onello et al. 1995; Cameron & Kulkarni 2007).
- G81.6+1.0 a possible SNR in W75 reported by
Ward-Thompson & Robson (1991). From the published data (see the
observations in Wendker, Higgs & Landecker 1991) it was noted in
Version IV of the catalogue that this is thermal source not a SNR,
because of its thermal radio spectrum, and high infrared-to-radio
emission (see also the subsequent discussion by Wendker et al. 1993).
- Green & Gull (1984) suggested G227.1+1.0 as a very
young SNR, but subsequent observations (Channan et al. 1986; Green &
Gull 1986) have shown that this is most likely an extragalactic source,
not an SNR.
- A candidate SNR, G274.7−2.8, identified by Helfand &
Channan (1989), has been shown not to be a SNR by Caswell & Stewart
(1991).
- G159.6−18.5, was suggested as a SN by Pauls &
Schwartz (1989), from IRAS and other observations – see also Fiedler
et al. (1994) – but appears to be an HII region (see also Andersson
et al. 2000; Ridge et al. 2006; Remy et al. 2018; Millard et al. 2021).
- G25.5+0.2, which was reported as a very young SNR by
Cowan et al. (1989), although this identification was not certain (see
also White & Becker 1990; Green 1990a; Zijlstra 1991). Sramek et al.
(1992) report the detection of recombination lines from this source (see
also Subrahmanyan et al. 1993). Becklin et al. (1994) identify
G25.5+0.2 as a ring nebula around a luminous blue star. See also
Clark, Steele & Langer (2000), and Phillips & Ramos-Larios (2008) who
identified G25.5+0.2 as a possible symbiotic outflow.
- Trushkin (1990) reported additional radio observations
of extended radio sources from the Kallas & Reich (1980) Galactic
single-dish survey at 1.4 GHz. Eight sources identified with non-thermal
radio spectra were noted as possible SNRs. However, more recent higher
resolution observations reveals most of these sources are compact
sources (Kerton 2006), and two remaining extended sources, KR 48 and KR
171, are identified as more likely being HII regions (also note KR 48
is G104.7+2.8, see further discussion below).
- Joncas & Higgs (1990) report two extended radio
sources, 24P 114 and 24P130, as candidate young SNRs. However,
subsequent higher resolution observations (Green & Joncas 1994) showed
these to be compact sources.
- Several of the possible SNRs listed by Gorham (1990) –
following up SNR candidates suggested by Kassim (1988a) – have been
shown likely not to be SNRs by Gorham, Kulkarni & Prince (1993).
- A possible SNR (near l=32.°15, b=+0.°13)
reported from optical spectroscopy by Thompson, Djorgovski & de
Carvalho (1991), following up radio and infrared observations of Jones,
Garwood & Dickey (1988), although this has a thermal radio spectrum,
and has been identified as an ultra-compact HII region (e.g. Watson
et al. 2003, Leto et al. 2009, Kalcheva et al. 2018).
- G203.2−12.3, a optical ring about 3 arcmin in
diameter, was reported as a possible SNR by Winkler & Reipurth (1992),
but was shown to be an Herbig–Haro object (HH 311) by Reipurth, Bally &
Devine (1997), see also Rosado, Raga & Arias (1999).
- G104.7+2.8, a possible SNR suggested by Green &
Joncas (1994), which instead appears to be an HII region, based on the
improved observations by Kerton (2006) and Kothes et al. (2006).
See also Anderson et al. (2015) and Karska et al. (2022).
- G247.8+4.9 was noted as a possible optical SN by
Weinberger (1995), see also Zanin & Kerber (2000). However, it is
regarded as a possible or probable planetary nebula (PN) by Parker
et al. (2006). See also Boffin et al. (2012) and Frew, Bojičić &
Parker (2013).
- G359.87+0.18 was reported as a possible young SNR
near the Galactic Centre by Yusef-Zadeh, Cotton & Reynolds (1998), but
was shown to be a radio galaxy by Lazio et al. (1999).
- Zhang (2003) identified four candidate SNRs from radio
surveys, on the basis of shell structure with apparent non-thermal radio
spectra. One of these – called G41.9+0.04 by Zhang – corresponds to
the catalogued SNR G42.0−0.1. However, the other three proposed
SNR candidates appear to be thermal sources, not SNRs.
First, the source called G47.8+2.03 by Zhang has a thermal spectrum on
the basis of its published 2.7-GHz flux density (Fürst et al. 1990b)
and Zhang’s 1.4-GHz flux density. Second, Zhang’s source G74.8+0.63 is
a known HII region Sharpless Sh 2-104 (e.g. Dickel & Milne 1972;
Israël 1977; Weiler & Shaver 1978; Pineault & Chastenay 1990). Note
that Israël had discussed that this source had been included in some
SNR earlier catalogues (Milne 1970; Downes 1971), before the HII
region identification became clear. Third, Zhang’s source G93.2+2.63,
is identified as a thermal source by Arvidsson, Kerton & Foster (2009),
as radio recombination lines from it have been detected.
- Morris et al. (2006) suggested small remnant observed
by Spitzer, which has subsequently instead been identified as a
likely PN by Fesen & Milisavljevic (2010), see also Mizuno et al.
(2010).
- Bhatnagar (2001) suggested G3.7−0.1 as a compact
(≈1′) SNR, based on GMRT and other radio observations (see also
Yusef-Zadeh, Hewitt & Cotton 2004, who call the candidate SNR
G3.66−0.1). However, this source had already been identified as a
compact HII region by Wink et al. (1982). See also Giveon et al.
(2005).
- An extended region of X-ray emission, near
l=356.°8, b=−1.°7 is reported as a possible SNR by Tomsick
et al. (2009). Subsequently Barrière et al. (2015) identified this as
a galaxy cluster and a blazar. See also Watanabe et al. (2019).
- The TeV γ-ray source MGRO J2019+37 is
discussed by Saha & Bhattcharjee (2014) as either a PWN or SNR. (Note
that declination for the source given by Saha & Bhattcharjee is wrong.)
However, the SNR identification is not supported by observations by Aliu
et al. (2014), who resolve MGRO J2019+37 into two sources, one
associated with G74.9+1.2, and the other with the pulsar
J2021+3651.
- Demetroullas et al. (2015) suggest a region of radio
emission, NGC 6334D (near l=351.°6, b=0.°2), seen in their
31-GHz observations, apparently with a non-thermal radio spectrum, might
be a SNR. (Note that the coordinates of some figures in Demetroullas
et al. are in error.) However, other available observations of this
region do not support a SNR identification for NGC 6334D. Demetroullas
et al. noted there are two sources in the Northern VLA Sky Survey (NVSS,
Condon et al. 1998, at 1.4 GHz with a resolution of 45 arcsec) in the
region of NGC 6334D, with peaks of 2.1 and 2.0 Jy beam−1. Each of
these sources have integrated flux densities of about 3.8 Jy in the
NVSS, and other observations (e.g. Murphy et al. 2007) show they have
relatively flat radio spectra. They are each associated with one or more
compact HII regions identified by Giveon et al. (2005), from higher
resolution 5-GHz and IR observations. The NVSS sources are separated by
about 4 arcmin, and – with flat radio spectra – explain the extended
emission of NGC 6334D seen in Demetroullas et al.’s lower resolution
31-GHz image. Higher quality 1.4-GHz observations from the SGPS
(Haverkorn et al. 2006) do not show any obvious emission, apart from
that from the NVSS sources, in this region that might indicate a SNR.
- A sample of ‘giant radio sources’ identified in the
NVSS is presented by Proctor (2016). One of these sources, NVGRC
J205051.1+312728 is annotated as ‘SNR?′ (among other possibilities),
but this is actually part of the Cygnus Loop (=G74.0−8.5,
e.g. see Green 1990b). Several other of these sources correspond
to other parts of the Cygnus Loop, or to other known SNRs.
- Dzib et al. (2018) present observations of small (only
≈15″ in extent) radio shell, which they suggest may be a SNR.
However, this source has already been identified as a candidate PN by
Froebrich et al. (2015) from its extended IR H2 emission.
- Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a) identified as HII
regions several sources previously reported as possible SNRs: G1.2−0.0
(Sawada et al. 2009), G5.3+0.1 (Trushkin 2001), G12.75−0.15 and
G19.00−0.35 (Gosachinskiĭ 1985), and G354.4+0.0 (Roy & Pal
2013).
- Martí, Luque-Escamilla & Sánchez-Ayaso (2023)
identify an HI cavity and radio continuum features as a possible old
SNR. This corresponds to Lynds Bright Nebula 315 (Lynds 1965), and is
listed as a known HII region in
the online version (V2.3),
of the WISE HII region catalogue (Anderson et al. 2014), see also
Anderson et al. (2015).
See also further comments in Section 2.3, when there is
evidence that some other objects which have been proposed SNRs are not
remnants.
Some entries in the catalogue have been renamed, due
to improved observations revealing a larger true extent for the object
(previously G5.3−1.0 is now G5.4−1.2; G308.7+0.0 is now
incorporated into G308.8−0.1). G337.0−0.1 now refers to a
small (1.5 arcmin) remnant, rather than larger supposed remnant at this
position (see Sarma et al. 1997), and G350.0−2.0 now incorporates
the previously catalogued G350.0−1.8, based on the improved
observations of Gaensler (1998). G106.6+2.9, which was proposed as a
small remnant by Halpern et al. (2001), is incorporated into the larger
catalogued remnant G106.3+2.7.
The following remnants were added to Version II of the catalogue:
G0.9+0.1, G1.9+0.3, G5.9+3.1, G6.4+4.0,
G8.7−0.1, G18.9−1.1, G20.0−0.2,
G27.8+0.6, G30.7+1.0, G31.5−0.6, G36.6−0.7,
G42.8+0.6, G45.7−0.4, G54.1+0.3, G73.9+0.9,
G179.0+2.6, G312.4−0.4, G357.7+0.3 and
G359.1−0.5.
The following remnants were added to Version III of the catalogue:
G4.2−3.5, G5.2−2.6, G6.1+1.2, G8.7−5.0,
G13.5+0.2, G15.1−1.6, G16.7+0.1, G17.4−2.3,
G17.8−2.6, G30.7−2.0, G36.6+2.6, G43.9+1.6,
G59.8+1.2, G65.1+0.6, G68.6−1.2, G69.7+1.0,
G279.0+1.1, G284.3−1.8 (=MSH 10−53), G358.4−1.9 and
G359.0−0.9 (although, as noted above, G59.8+1.2 and G358.4−1.9
have subsequently been removed).
The following remnants were added to Version IV of the catalogue:
G59.5+0.1, G67.7+1.8, G84.9+0.5, G156.2+5.7,
G318.9+0.4, G322.5−0.1, G343.1−2.3 and G348.5−0.0
(although, as noted above, G84.9+0.5 was subsequently removed).
The following remnants were added to 1995 July version of the catalogue:
G1.0−0.1, G1.4−0.1, G3.7−0.2, G3.8+0.3,
G28.8+1.5, G76.9+1.0, G272.2−3.2, G341.2+0.9,
G354.1+0.1, G355.6−0.0, G356.3−0.3, G356.3−1.5 and
G359.1+0.9.
The following remnants were added to the 1996 August version of the catalogue:
G13.3−1.3, G286.5−1.2, G289.7−0.3, G294.1−0.0,
G299.2−2.9, G299.6−0.5, G301.4−1.0, G308.1−0.7,
G310.6−0.3, G310.8−0.4, G315.9−0.0, G317.3−0.2,
G318.2+0.1, G320.6−1.6, G321.9−1.1, G327.4+1.0,
G329.7+0.4, G342.1+0.9, G343.1−0.7, G345.7−0.2,
G349.2−0.1, G351.7+0.8, G351.9−0.9 and
G354.8−0.8.
The following remnants were added to the 1998 September version of the
catalogue: G0.3+0.0, G32.1−0.9, G55.0+0.3,
G63.7+1.1 and G182.4+4.3.
The following remnants were added to the 2000 August version of the catalogue:
G7.0−0.1, G16.2−2.7, G29.6+0.1, G266.2−1.2 and
G347.3−0.5.
The following remnants were added to the 2001 December version of the
catalogue: G4.8+6.2, G28.6−0.1, G85.4+0.7,
G85.9−0.6, G106.3+2.7, G292.2−0.5, G343.0−6.0,
G353.9−2.0, G356.2+4.5 and G358.0+3.8.
G312.5−3.0 was added to Version V of the catalogue.
The following remnants were added to the 2006 April version of the
catalogue: G5.5+0.3, G6.1+0.5, G6.5−0.4,
G7.2+0.2, G8.3−0.0, G8.9+0.4, G9.7−0.0,
G9.9−0.8, G10.5−0.0, G11.0−0.0, G11.1−0.7,
G11.1−1.0, G11.1+0.1, G11.8−0.2, G12.2+0.3,
G12.5+0.2, G12.7−0.0, G12.8−0.0, G14.1−0.1,
G14.3+0.1, G15.4+0.1, G16.0−0.5, G16.4−0.5,
G17.0−0.0, G17.4−0.1, G18.1−0.1, G18.6−0.2,
G19.1+0.2, G20.4+0.1, G21.0−0.4, G21.5−0.1,
G32.4+0.1, G96.0+2.0, G113.0+0.2 and
G337.2+0.1 (as noted above, G8.3−0.0, G10.5−0.0, G11.1−1.0,
G14.3+0.1, G16.4−0.5, G20.4+0.1 and G21.5−0.1 have subsequently
been removed).
The following remnants were added to Version VI of the catalogue:
G83.0−0.3, G108.2−0.6, G315.1+2.7,
G332.5−5.6, G327.2−0.1, G350.1−0.3,
G353.6−0.7, G355.4+0.7, G358.1+1.0 and
G358.5−0.9. Note that G358.1+1.0 was in Versions VI and
VII with the wrong name, G358.1+0.1, which was corrected in
the 2017 June version.
The following remnants were added to Version VII of the catalogue:
G21.6−0.8, G25.1−2.3, G35.6−0.4, G38.7−1.3,
G41.5+0.4, G42.0−0.1, G64.5+0.9, G65.8−0.5,
G66.0−0.0, G67.6+0.9, G67.8+0.5, G152.4−2.1,
G159.6+7.3, G178.2−4.2, G190.9−2.2,
G213.0−0.6, G296.7−0.9, G306.3−0.9,
G308.4−1.4, G310.6−1.6 and G322.1+0.0 (as noted
above, G65.8−0.5 has subsequently been removed).
G70.0−21.5 and G351.0−5.4 were added to the 2017 June
version of the catalogue.
The following remnants were added to Version VIII of the catalogue:
G181.1+9.5, G323.7−1.0, G150.3+4.5 and
G53.4+0.0.
The following remnants were added to the 2022 December version of the
catalogue: G3.1−0.6, G7.5−1.7, G13.1−0.5,
G15.5−0.1, G21.8−3.0 G28.3+0.2, G28.7−0.4,
G107.0+9.0, G249.5+24.5, G345.1−0.2,
G345.1+0.2, G348.8+1.1, G353.3−1.1 and
G359.2−1.1.
The following remnants have been added to this version of the catalogue.
- G17.8+16.7, a remnant identified from its
non-thermal radio emission by Araya, Hurley-Walker & Quirós-Araya
(2022).
- Dokara et al. (2023) confirmed three candidate remnants
as SNRs, from radio observations, including polarisation (all three of
which had been suggested as possible SNRs by Helfand et al. 2006). Two
of these – G28.3+0.2 and G28.7−0.4 – had already been
included in the catalogue from the 2022 December version, following
observations by Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a). The third,
G29.3+0.1, has been added to this version fo the catalogue.
- A large (≈4°), high latitude SNR,
G116.6−26.1, which was first identified as a possible remnant by
Churazov et al. (2021) from X-ray observations, and subsequently
confirmed from radio and optical observations (Churazov et al. 2022,
Palaiologou, Leonidaki & Kopsacheili 2022).
- G189.6+3.3, a faint SNR overlapping
G189.1+3.0 (=IC443) – first suggested by Asaoka & Aschenbach
(1994) from ROSAT X-ray observations – following improved X-ray eROSITA
observations by Camilloni & Becker (2023).
- Gao et al. (2022) presented radio observations of
two new large SNRs, G203.1+6.6 and G206.7+5.9. These had
previously been reported as possible SNRs by both Reich (2002) and
Soberski, Reich & Wielebinski (2005).
- One of the candidate remnants reported by Duncan et al.
(1997), G288.8−6.3, from radio observations has been confirmed as
a large, faint SNR from improved radio observations by Filipović
et al. (2023).
The following are possible or probable SNRs for which further
observations are required to confirm their nature or parameters.
These are listed in Table IV, which gives their Galactic coordinate
based name, size, and a reference for these possible and probable SNRs
reported in the literature. The names and sizes are those given in the
literature unless marked with an ‘?′, in which case I have estimated
them. For the names taken from the literature, some have been truncated
to two decimal places (as three decimal places is not warranted), and
it should be noted that others may have been rounded, not truncated.
Note that many of these possible and probable SNRs overlap each other
to some extent.
- Gómez-González & del Romero (1983) report a
possible SNR G57.1+1.7 (about 40 arcmin in extent), near the pulsar
PSR 1930+22. Later Routledge & Vaneldik (1988) instead proposed a
possible larger remnant, nearly 2° in diameter, near the same
pulsar. See also Kovalenko (1989).
- A possible SNR near the Galactic centre reported by Ho
et al. (1985) from radio observations (see also Coil & Ho 2000; Lu,
Wang & Lang 2003; Senda, Murakami & Koyama 2003, Johnson, Dong & Wang
2009). More recently Zhang et al. (2014) do not support a SNR
identification for this source.
- Gosachinskiĭ (1985) reported evidence for
non-thermal radio emission, presumably from SNRs, associated with
several bright, thermal Galactic sources. Some of these sources have
been included in the catalogue, following improved observations.
See also Odegard (1986), who questions the reliability of some of
Gosachinskiĭ’s results, and also suggest another possible SNR,
G7.6−0.6, and Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a) who identify two
of Gosachinskiĭ’s sources as HII regions.
- G300.1+9.4, a possible SNR nearly 2° in diameter
reported by Dubner, Colomb & Giacani (1986).
- Gorham (1990) lists many SNR candidates from the Clark
Lake 30.9 MHz survey of the first quadrant, following Kassim (1988a),
one of which (G13.1−0.5) is included in the catalogue following
improved observations be Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a). Several other
have been shown not to be SNRs by Gorham, Kulkarni & Prince (1993).
Gorham et al. report a poorly defined possible remnant G41.4+1.2
(previously G41.6+1.2 in Gorham 1990). Aharonian et al. (2008a) note
that one of Gorham’s candidates, G44.6+0.1, is in the vicinity of an
extended region of γ-ray emission HESS J1912+101 (see also Su
et al. 2018; H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla et al. 2018b; Reich &
Sun 2019; Zhang et al. 2020b; Sun, Yang & Liang 2022; Duvidovich &
Petriella 2023; Li, Liu & He 2023). There are in fact two candidate
remnants in Gorham (1990) which overlaps HESS J1912+101, namely
G44.6+0.1 and also G44.2+0.5 (although it should be noted that
Gorham’s absolute positions are uncertain due ionospheric effects, see
Kassim 1988b). Plus, there is another candidate SNR overlapping HESS
J1912+101, G44.0−0.1 from Trushkin (2001), see below. Another
γ-ray source, HESS J1857+026 (see Ackermann et al. 2017)
corresponds to Gorham’s candidate remnant G36.0−0.2.
- Four possible remnants (G45.9−0.1, G71.6−0.5,
G72.2−0.3 and G85.2−1.2) of the eleven reported by Taylor, Wallace
& Goss (1992) from a radio survey of part of the Galactic plane (see
also Kothes et al. 2006). Six of the other possible SNRs reported by
Taylor et al., are included in the catalogue as G55.0+0.3,
G59.5+0.1, G63.7+1.1, G67.7+1.8, G76.9+1.0
and G83.0−0.3, following improved observations which have
confirmed their nature. The other candidate, G84.9+0.5, was included
in earlier versions of the catalogue, but was removed in Version VI, as
it has been shown to be an HII region (see above).
- Gray (1994b) identify several possible SNRs from radio
observations near the Galactic centre, some of which have been included
in the catalogue, following additional observations. See also Roy &
Pramesh Rao (2002), Bhatnagar (2002), Cotton et al. (2022)
and Heywood et al. (2022) for additional observations.
- Duncan et al. (1995) and Duncan et al. (1997) list
several large-scale (1.5 to 10 degree), and smaller, low radio
surface-brightness candidate SNRs from the Parkes 2.4-GHz survey of
270° < l < 360°. Several of these candidates have been
confirmed as SNRs by subsequent, improved observations, and are included
in the catalogue. See also Camilo et al.
(2004), Chang et al. (2012) and Danilenko et al. (2012) for further
observations of G309.8−2.6, which is near a young pulsar;
Russeil et al. (2005), who detected optical filaments from a third; and
Shan et al. (2019).
- Whiteoak & Green (1996), from their radio survey of
much of the southern Galactic plane, list many possible SNRs, several of
which have been included in the catalogue, following improved
observations, while most have not. See also Green, Reeves & Murphy
(2014) and Ball et al. (2023) for additional radio observations of some
of these. Another of the possible SNRs listed in Whiteoak & Green
(1996), G319.9−0.7, has been identified as a pulsar bow-shock by Ng
et al. (2010).
- Combi & Romero (1998), Combi, Romero & Arnal (1998),
Combi, Romero & Benaglia (1998) and Punsly et al. (2000) report several
candidate SNRs from spatially filter radio survey images.
- Possible SNRs, near l=313°, were reported by
Roberts et al. (1999), and Roberts, Romani & Johnston (2001). See also
Aharonian et al. (2006) γ-ray observations of the region.
- G359.07−0.02, a possible SNR noted by LaRosa et al.
(2000), see also Nakashima et al. (2010) and Ponti et al. (2015).
- A possible SNRs near G6.4−0.1 (=W28) noted by
Yusef-Zadeh et al. (2000). (A second possible remnant noted by
Yusef-Zadeh et al. has been included in the catalogue, as
G6.5−0.4, following the improved observations of it by Brogan
et al. 2006).
- Gaensler et al. (2000), in a search for pulsar wind
nebulae, found a small shell of radio emission near PSR B1356−60 –
which they designate G311.28+1.09 – which may be a supernova remnant.
- A possible SNR, G328.6−0.0, noted by
McClure-Griffiths et al. (2001) in the test region of the Southern
Galactic Plane Survey. See also Ball et al. (2023).
- G346.5−0.1, an arc of radio emission observed by Gaensler
et al. (2001), which is potentially part of a SNR, but requires further
observations to confirm its nature.
- Several possible SNRs reported by Trushkin (2001),
which were identified from Galactic radio surveys (one of which,
G6.1+0.5, is included in the catalogue, due to improved
subsequent observations). One of these, G5.3+0.1 has been identified
as an HII region by Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a).
- Two possibles SNRs (G336.1−0.2 and G352.2−0.1)
discussed briefly by Manchester et al. (2002).
- G282.8−1.2, a possible young SNR noted by Misanovic,
Cram & Green (2002).
- G43.5+0.6, one of three possible SNRs identified by
Kaplan et al. (2002); the other two are included in the catalogue, as
G41.5+0.4 and G42.0−0.1, because subsequent observations
have shown they have non-thermal radio spectra.
- G107.5−1.5, a probable remnant identified at by Kothes
(2003), but the full extent of which is not well defined at present
(see also Kothes et al. 2006; Jackson, Safi-Harb & Kothes 2014;
Bakış et al. 2023).
- Brogan et al. (2006) identified 35 new SNRs in the
region 4.°5 < l < 22°, |b| < 1.°25, of which the
31 which are classed as ‘I’ or ‘II’ (i.e. those thought to be very or
fairly confidently identified as SNRs) were included in the 2006 April
version of the catalogue. Several of these – G8.3−0.0, G10.5−0.0
G11.1−1.0, G14.3+0.1, G16.4−0.5, G20.4+0.1 and G21.5−0.1 –
have subsequently been removed, as they have been identified as HII
regions (see above). Brogan et al. also listed four other possible SNRs
which required further observations to confirm their nature and better
define their parameters, one of which (G15.5−0.1) has been
included from the catalogue from the 2022 December version, following
observations by Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a). See also Aharonian et al.
(2008b), Hewitt & Yusef-Zadeh (2009), Joubert et al. (2016), Stupar,
Parker & Few (2018) and Shan et al. (2018).
- Helfand et al. (2006) list many SNR candidates in the
region 5° < l < 32°, |b| < 0.°8 from MAGPIS.
Many of these correspond to sources in Brogan et al., and several have
been included in the catalogue, with the others requiring further
observations. Note that the integrated flux densities reported in
Helfand et al. are very high compared with those reported in Brogan
et al.. One of these candidates, G29.07+0.45, is known planetary
nebula (Abell 1955, 1966). See also Todt et al. (2013) and Frew et al.
2014). Many of these candidate SNRs are also discussed by Johanson &
Kerton (2009), who conclude that eight of them are HII regions rather
than SNRs. Several of these candidates are also associated with
‘bubbles’ from HII regions (Simpson et al. 2012), or with known or
candidate HII region in the WISE HII region catalogue (Anderson
et al. 2014, Hurley-Walker et al. 2019a). Much of region covered by the
MAGPIS has more recently been observed by the THOR and GLOSTAR
surveys, see further discussion below (and also Goss, Matthews &
Winnberg 1978; Subrahmanyan & Goss 1996; Kargaltsev & Pavlov 2007; Lee
et al. 2012; Dokara et al. 2023; Zheng et al. 2023).
- Martí et al. (2007), report extended radio
emission near the X-ray source KS 1741−295 near the Galactic centre
which may be a SNR (see also Cherepashchuk et al. 1994).
- A poorly defined possible SNR, near l=151°,
b=3° reported by Kerton, Murphy & Patterson (2007).
- Anderson et al. (2012) report extended radio emission,
designated G333.9+0.0, near a magnetar, which may be a SNR.
- Five candidate remnants, G108.5+11.0, G128.5+2.6,
G149.5+3.2, G150.8+3.8 and G160.1−1.1, are identified from radio
surveys by Gerbrandt et al. (2014), see also Gao et al. (20210) and Tung
et al. (2017). One of these, G150.8+3.8, is part of SNR
G150.3+4.5 (Gao & Han 2014), which was added in Version VIII of
the catalogue.
- Sidorin et al. (2014) note that there is possibly
non-thermal radio emission near l=51°, b=0°),
overlapping GLIMPSE IR bubble N107, which may indicate a SNR. More
recently Supan et al. (2018) present radio and IR observations of this
region, and suggest part of the non-thermal emission noted by Sidorin
et al., as a SNR. See also Anderson et al. (2017), Driessen et al.
(2018) and Dokara et al. (2018).
- Kothes et al. (2014) report the discovery of a new
PWN, G141.2+5.0, which lies within an HI cavity, which might
be an indication of remnant. See also Reynolds & Borkowski (2016).
- Green, Reeves & Murphy (2014) list over twenty
candidate SNRs identified in the second epoch Molonglo Galactic Plane
Survey. Two of these, G296.7−0.9 and G308.4−1.4 were added
in Version VII of the catalogue, and G323.7−1.0 was
added in Version VIII, based on other available observations.
Several of the others are previously reported candidate SNRs (e.g.
Duncan et al. 1995; Whiteoak & Green 1996; Duncan et al. 1997).
See also Ball et al. (2023).
- Bihr et al. (2016) present radio observations in the
regions l=14.°0−37.°9 and l=47.°1−51.°2, |b| ≤
1.°1, from the THOR survey (e.g. Beuther et al. 2016). This
includes many of the candidates in Helfand et al. (2006), and Bihr
et al. identify several of these as HII regions. Anderson et al.
(2017) use radio observations from THOR and VGPS, plus mid-IR
observations, to identify 76 candidate remnants in 17.°5 < l <
67.°4, |b| ≤ 1.°5. Several of which correspond to candidates
previously identified by Helfand et al. (2016) from MAGPIS
(see above). Several of these candidates are small (less than 2′ in
extent), and would be very young SNRs even if at the far side of the
Galaxy. For several of these small candidates higher resolution radio
observations are available from MAGPIS, which do not support
these as being young SNRs. For example, the candidate G38.83−0.01 from
Anderson et al. (2017), given as a radius of 0.′6, is resolved into
2 compact sources. See also Castelletti et al. (2017), Dokara et al.
(2018), Driessen et al. (2018), Wang et al. (2018), Karpova, Zyuzin &
Shibanov (2019), Maxted et al. (2019), Petriella et al. (2019),
H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla et al. (2020) Araya et al. (2021) and
Zhong et al. (2023) for further observations of some of the candidates
listed by Anderson et al. (2017). See also Ranasinghe, Leahy & Stil
(2021), who discuss one of these possible young SNRs, and suggest
another small possible remnant from THOR and other observations.
- Sushch et al. (2017) present radio observations that
identify a possible SNR, G304.4−0.2. See also Voisin et al. (2019).
- Hurley-Walker et al. (2019b) list many candidate SNRs
in the regions 345° < l < 60° and 180 < l < 240°
|b| < 10° from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA
(GLEAM) radio survey (Hurley-Walker et al. 2019c). Also,
Hurley-Walker et al. (2019a) provide additional GLEAM observations of
many previously proposed candidate SNRs.
- G351.7−1.2 a candidate remnant identified by
Veena et al. (2019a) from radio and Hα observations (see
also Veena et al. 2019b).
- Ingallinera et al. (2019) reported three possible
remnants near l=344°, b=+0° from ATCA observations at
2.1 GHz.
- Sofue (2020) identifies a small diameter
hole in CO emission as a possible ‘dark’ SNR (see also Sofue 2021).
- Dokara et al. (2021) present radio observations in the
region 358° ≤ l ≤ 60°, |b| ≤ 1°, which
includes 157 candidate remnants, including many previously
proposed candidates SNRs. See also Heywood et al. (2022).
- G270.4−1.0, a possible ‘filled-centre’ SNR, with a
pulsar near its edge, identified at radio wavelengths by Johnston &
Lower (2021). (Note: this possible new remnant is sometimes erroneously
called G320.4−1.0 by Johnston & Lower.)
- Pol et al. (2021) note a large (≈1.°5) faint
region of radio emission, which also shows some Hα emission,
which may be a SNR. See also Zhang & Xin (2023).
- Arias et al. (2022) report a faint ring of radio
emission, with a pulsar, as a possible SNR (G118.4+37.0). See
also Xin & Gao (2022) and Araya (2023).
- Radio observations of several possible SNRs near the
Galactic Centre are presented by Heywood et al. (2022). These include
G358.7+0.7 previously noted as a possible remnant by Gray (1994b).
- Chen et al. (2023) suggest a possible SNR,
G124.0+1.4, based on faint, extended radio emission seen in the 6 cm
(i.e. 5 GHz) Urumqi radio survey (Sun et al. 2007). This is despite the
fact that they show this emission is dominated by three compact sources
in other, higher resolution radio surveys. Moreover, there is no obvious
extended emission seen in this region in the sensitive Canadian Galactic
Plane Radio Survey (Taylor et al. 2003), at either 408 MHz or 1.4 GHz.
- A faint shell of radio emission, G45.24+0.18 – which
is near a pulsar with a radio trail – is reported as a possible SNR by
Motta et al. (2023).
- Ibrahim et al. (2023) report a faint
radio ring, near the magnetar SWIFT J1818.0−1607, as possible
indication of a SNR.
- Radio observations of 323° ≤ l ≤
330°, -4° ≤ b ≤ 2° are presented by Ball et al.
(2023). These include several new possible SNRs, plus additional
observations of some previously suggested possible remnnnats. Ball
et al. also identify the catalogued G323.7−1.0 as three
seperate candidate remnants.
- Winkler et al. (1989) report a possible small
(4 arcmin) SNR within the Puppis A remnant, from optical observations
(see also Sutherland & Dopita 1995). This has not been detected at
radio wavelengths (see Dubner et al. 1991). See also Ghavamian et al.
(2019) who suggest this is due to the supernova shock from one binary
member interacting with the other.
- G75.5+2.4, a possible large (1.°5×1.°8) old
SNR in Cygnus suggested by Nichols-Bohlin & Fesen (1993) from infrared
and optical observations (see also Dewdney & Lozinskaya 1994; Marston
1996; Esipov et al. 1996; Kothes et al. 2006).
- Two possible SNRs, G340.5+0.7 and G342.1+0.1,
identified by Walker, Zealey & Parker (2001) from filaments seen in
Hα survey observations. See also Stupar, Parker & Filipović (2008).
The larger of these, G342.1+0.1, overlaps some catalogued SNRs.
- A possible SNR which was identified by Bally &
Reipurth (2001) – which they label as G110.3+11.3 – from optical
filaments. See also Rector & Schweiker (2013).
- Mavromatakis & Strom (2002) identify a possible
remnant from optical observations of filaments near l=70°,
b=+2°. Kothes et al. (2006) do not find any radio counterpart
from this source at 408 MHz or 1.4 GHz from the CGPS survey.
Subsequently Mavromatakis et al. (2009) proposed the brighter part of
these optical filaments, as a possible smaller remnant, G70.5+1.9.
- A possible remnant identified from optical filaments to
the NE of the known SNR G116.5+1.1, as observed by Mavromatakis
et al. (2005).
- Russell et al. (2007) report a small (about 7 arcmin in
extent) optical ring, which is very faint at radio wavelengths, just to
the NW of Cygnus X-1 (see also Gallo et al. 2005). This may be a SNR if
it is not associated with Cygnus X-1, although Sell et al. (2015) regard
this as unlikely.
- Stupar, Parker & Filipović (2008) report several SNR
candidates identified from Hα observations, several of which
correspond to SNR candidates first suggested by Duncan et al. (1995,
1997) from radio observations. The full extent of most of these are not
well defined, but two are currently included in the main catalogue
(G315.1+2.7, and G332.5−5.6). See also Stupar, Parker &
Filipović (2010).
- Optical filaments indicating a possible new SNR,
G304.4−3.1 are presented by Stupar, Parker & Filipović (2010).
- Stupar, Parker & Filipović (2011) report a possible
new SNR, G310.5−0.8, identified from optical filaments and associated
radio emission.
- Ritter et al. (2021) propose the faint, fast expanding
optical nebula Pa 30 as the remnant of the historical supernova of
AD1181, rather than G130.7+3.1 (=3C58). See also Fesen,
Schaefer & Patchick (2023) and Lykou et al. (2023).
- H1538−32 a large X-ray source in Lupus, near
l=340°, b=+18° was identified as a possible SNR by
Riegler, Agrawal & Gull (1980), see also Colomb, Dubner & Giacani
(1984), Gahm et al. (1990). However, more recently Franco (2002) suggest
it is instead a local X-ray enhancement.
- G117.7+0.6, a faint shell of soft X-ray emission near
G116.9+0.2 (=CTB 1), which contains a pulsar (Hailey & Craig
1995). See also Craig, Hailey & Pisarski (1997), Kothes et al. (2006) and
Esposito et al. (2008).
- A possible SNR identified in X-rays around the pulsar
B1828−13 suggested by Finley, Srinivasan & Park (1996), see also
Braun, Goss & Lyne (1989), Shan et al. (2018) and H.E.S.S.
Collaboration: Abdalla et al.
(2018a). But Pavlov, Kargaltsev & Brisken (2008) do not find any
evidence for a remnant around B1828−13.
- A possible, large SNR, G69.4+1.2, identified as an
X-ray shell by Yoshita, Miyata & Tsunemi (1999, 2000). See also
Mavromatakis, Boumis & Paleologou (2002) and Kothes et al. (2006).
- Schaudel et al. (2002) report 14 candidate SNRs
identified in the ROSAT All-Sky Survey, but provided images and
coordinates for only 3 of these (which have been included in the
catalogue, as G38.7−1.3, G296.7−0.9 and G308.4−1.4,
following improved observations of them).
- Many possible SNRs near the Galactic Centre have been
reported by various authors from X-ray observations (e.g. Senda,
Murakami & Koyama 2002, 2003; Renaud et al. 2006; Koyama et al. 2007;
Mori et al. 2008; Nobukawa et al. 2008; Inui et al. 2009; Tsuru et al.
2009; Heard & Warwick 2013; Ponti et al. 2015), which are reviewed by
Koyama (2018). See also Law, Yusef-Zadeh & Cotton (2008), Dexter et al.
(2017), Simpson (2018), Terrier et al. (2018), Yamauchi et al. (2018b),
Henshaw et al. (2019), Ponti et al. (2019), Zhang et al. (2020a),
Wang (2021) and Anastasopoulou et al. (2023).
- Several possible SNRs are reported by Bamba et al.
(2003) and Ueno et al. (2005, 2006), two of which have been included in
the catalogue (as G28.6−0.1 and G32.4+0.1), as additional
observations confirm their nature. One of the proposed remnants is
called G11.0+0.0, but is larger than the currently catalogued
G11.0−0.0. One of these candidates, G37.0−0.1, has instead been
strongly suggested as a cluster of Galaxies by Yamauchi, Bamba & Koyama
(2011). The nature of another, G25.5+0.0, has been questioned by
Kargaltsev et al. (2012), who also proposed another, smaller possible
SNR, G25.25+0.28, which corresponds to one of the candidates listed by
Helfand et al. (2006). For a third source, G23.5+0.1, Kargalstev
et al. prefer a pulsar wind nebula interpretation. Yamauchi, Sumita &
Bamba (2016) also identify G23.5+0.1 and G22.0+0.0 as pulsar wind
nebulae. See also H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla et al. (2018a),
MAGIC Collaboration: Acciari et al. (2020), Dokara et al. (2021) and
Zhou et al. (2023).
- Brief details a possible new SNR identified from the
Swift X-ray Galactic Plane Survey are reported by Reynolds et al.
(2012).
- Nobukawa et al. (2015) present Suzaku observations
which indicate a likely SNR near l=26.°4, b=−0.°2.
- Araya (2018) reports a large (greater than 3°)
region of γ-ray emission at l=350.°6, b=−4.°7, which may
be a SNR.
- A possible SNR, G121.1−1.9, reported by Khabibullin
et al. (2023), from X-ray observations which reveal extended X-ray
(which is not detected at other wavelengths).
- G287.8−0.5, which is associated with η Carinae, was
listed in Version I as a SNR, but was removed from the catalogue in Version II
as its parameters are uncertain (see Jones 1973; Retallack 1984; Tateyama,
Strauss & Kaufmann 1991; and the discussion in Version II).
- G359.2−0.8 (the ‘mouse’), near the Galactic centre, which
has been suggested as being analogous to the central region of G69.0+2.7
(=CTB 80) by Predehl & Kulkarni (1995), i.e. a pulsar powered nebula (see
also Camilo et al. 2002).
It should also be noted:
(a) Some large radio continuum, HI, CO or optical loops in the
Galactic plane that may be parts of very large, old SNRs, but they have
not been included in the catalogue. See also Berkhuijsen (1973), Grenier
et al. (1989), Combi et al. (1995), Duncan et al. (1995, 1997),
Maciejewski et al. (1996), Walker & Zealey (1998), Kim & Koo (2000),
Normandeau et al. (2000), Combi et al. (2001), Woermann, Gaylard &
Otrupcek (2001), Stil & Irwin (2001), Uyanıker & Kothes (2002),
Olano, Meschin & Niemela (2006), Borka (2007), Henley & Shelton
(2009), Kang, Koo & Salter (2012), Xiao & Zhu (2014), Cichowolski
et al. (2014), Sallmen et al. (2015), Bracco et al. (2020), Fesen et al.
(2021), Panopoulou et al. (2021), Iwashita, Kataoka & Sofue (2023) and
Sofue, Kataoka & Iwashita (2023).
Gao & Han (2013) discuss the nature of the Origem Loop – a large
radio loop – which has at times been regarded as a remnant. Also Koo,
Kang & Salter (2006) and Kang & Koo (2007) identify faint Galactic
HI features at forbidden velocities as indicators of old, otherwise
undetectable SNRs.
(b) Some large (> 10°) regions of X-ray emission that are
indicative of a SNR are not included in the catalogue;
e.g. the Monogem ring, near l=203°, b=+12° (see Nousek
et al. 1981, Plucinsky et al. 1996, Thorsett et al. 2003, Amenomori
et al. 2005, Plucinsky 2009, and references therein, plus Weinberger,
Temporin & Stecklum 2006 and Reich, Reich & Sun 2020);
in the Gum Nebula near l=250°, b=0° (Leahy, Nousek
& Garmire 1992), also see Reynolds (1976), Dubner et al. 1992, Duncan
et al. 1996, Reynoso & Dubner 1997, Heiles 1998, Pagani et al. 2012,
Purcell et al. 2015, Knies, Sasaki & Plucinsky 2018);
in Eridanus near l=200°, b=−40° (see Naranan et al.
1976, Burrows et al. 1993, Snowden et al. 1995, Heiles 1998, Boumis
et al. 2001, Ryu et al. 2006);
a large approximately 24° diameter, X-ray and optical loop in
Antlia (see McCullough, Fields & Pavlidou 2002, Shinn et al. 2007).
(c) The distinction between filled-centre remnants and pulsar wind nebulae
(PWNe) is not clear, and isolated, generally faint, pulsar wind nebulae are
also not included in the catalogue. See the catalogue of PWNe by
Kaspi, Roberts & Harding (2006)
(see also ‘Pulsar Wind Nebula Catalog’ online),
and the high-energy SNR and PWNe catalogue noted
above.
As noted in Versions II and IV of the catalogue, the following sources
are listed as SNRs, although, as discussed in each case, the
identifications are not certain: G5.4−1.2, G39.7−2.0
(=W50), G69.0+2.7 (=CTB 80), G318.9+0.4 and
G357.7−0.1. The nature of G76.9+1.0 (an unusual radio
source similar to G65.7+1.2), and of G354.1+0.1 (which may
be similar to G357.7−0.1 (=MSH 17−39)) are also
uncertain (see Landecker, Higgs & Wendker 1993 and Frail, Goss &
Whiteoak 1994). The identification of G6.1+0.5 as a SNR has been
questioned, from high frequency radio observations, by Dokara et al.
(2021), who propose two other possible SNRs near l=6.°1,
b=0.°4 instead. Also, Dokara et al. (2023) conclude that
G31.5−0.6 may not be a SNR, based on radio observations.
There are also some objects that have been identified as SNRs and are
listed in the catalogue, although they have been barely resolved in the
available observations, or are faint, and have not been well separated
from confusing background or nearby thermal emission, and their
identification as SNRs, or at least their parameters remain uncertain.
I am grateful to the many colleagues who have commented on previous
version of the catalogue, and have brought errors and omissions to my
attention. This research has made use of the Astrophysics Data System,
funded by NASA under Cooperative Agreement 80NSSC21M00561, and the
SIMBAD database, CDS, Strasbourg Astronomical Observatory, France.
- Abdollahi S. et al. 2020, ApJS, 247, 33.
ADS
- Abell G. O. 1955, PASP, 67, 258.
ADS
- Abell G. O. 1966, ApJ, 144, 259.
ADS
- Acero F. et al. 2016, ApJS, 224, 8.
ADS
- Ackermann M. et al. 2017, ApJ, 843, 139.
ADS
- Aharonian F. et al. 2006, A&A, 456, 245.
ADS
- Aharonian F. et al. 2008a, A&A, 484, 435.
ADS
- Aharonian F. et al. 2008b, A&A, 481, 401.
ADS
- Aliu E. et al. 2014, ApJ, 788, 78.
ADS
- Amenomori M. et al. 2005, ApJ, 635, L53.
ADS
- Anastasopoulou K. et al. 2023, A&A, 671, A55.
ADS
- Anderson G. E. et al. 2012, ApJ, 751, 53.
ADS
- Anderson L. D., Bania T. M., Balser D. S., Cunningham V., Wenger T. V., Johnstone B. M. & Armentrout W. P. 2014, ApJS, 212, 1.
ADS
- Anderson L. D., Armentrout W. P., Johnstone B. M., Bania T. M., Balser D. S., Wenger T. V. & Cunningham V. 2015, ApJS, 221, 26.
ADS
- Anderson L. D. et al. 2017, A&A, 605, A58.
ADS
- Andersson B.-G., Wannier P. G., Moriarty-Schieven G. H. & Bakker E. J. 2000, AJ, 119, 1325.
ADS
- Araya M. 2018, MNRAS, 474, 102.
ADS
- Araya M. 2021, ApJ, 921, 69.
ADS
- Araya M. 2023, MNRAS, 518, 4132.
ADS
- Araya M., Hurley-Walker N. & Quirós-Araya S. 2022, MNRAS, 510, 2920.
ADS
- Arendt R. G. 1989, ApJS, 70, 181.
ADS
- Arias M. et al. 2022, A&A, 667, A71.
ADS
- Arvidsson K., Kerton C. R. & Foster T. 2009, ApJ, 700, 1000.
ADS
- Asaoka I. & Aschenbach B. 1994, A&A, 284, 573.
ADS
- Bakış H., Bulut G., Bakış V., Sano H. & Sezer A. 2023, MNRAS, 521, 1099.
ADS
- Ball B. D. et al. 2023, MNRAS, 524, 1396.
ADS
- Bally J. & Reipurth B. 2001, ApJ, 552, L159.
ADS
- Bally J. et al. 1989, ApJ, 338, L65.
ADS
- Bamba A., Ueno M., Koyama K. & Yamauchi S. 2003, ApJ, 589, 253.
ADS
- Barrière N. M., Tomsick J. A., Wik D. R., Chaty S. & Rodriguez J. 2015, ApJ, 799, 24.
ADS
- Becker R. H. & Fesen R. A. 1988, ApJ, 334, L35.
ADS
- Becklin E. E., Zuckerman B., McLean I. S. & Geballe T. 1994, ApJ, 430, 774.
ADS
- Berkhuijsen E. M. 1973, A&A, 24, 143.
ADS
- Beuther H. et al. 2016, A&A, 595, A32.
ADS
- Bhatnagar S. 2001, BASI, 29, 277.
ADS
- Bhatnagar S. 2002, MNRAS, 332, 1.
ADS
- Bihr S. et al. 2016, A&A, 588, A97.
ADS
- Boffin H. M. J. et al. 2012, The Messenger, 148, 25.
ADS
- Bonsignori-Facondi S. R. & Tomasi P. 1979, A&A, 77, 93.
ADS
- Borka V. 2007, MNRAS, 376, 634.
ADS
- Boumis P., Dickinson C., Meaburn J., Goudis C. D., Christopoulou P. E., López J. A., Bryce M. & Redman M. P. 2001, MNRAS, 320, 61.
ADS
- Bracco A. et al. 2020, A&A, 636, L8.
ADS
- Braun R., Goss W. M. & Lyne A. G. 1989, ApJ, 340, 355.
ADS
- Brogan C. L., Gelfand J. D., Gaensler B. M., Kassim N. E. & Lazio T. J. W. 2006, ApJ, 639, L25.
ADS
- Burrows D. N., Singh K. P., Nousek J. A., Garmire G. P. & Good J. 1993, ApJ, 406, 97.
ADS
- Cameron P. B. & Kulkarni S. R. 2007, ApJ, 665, L135.
ADS
- Camilloni F. & Becker W. 2023, A&A, 680, A83.
ADS
- Camilo F., Manchester R. N., Gaensler B. M. & Lorimer D. R. 2002, ApJ, 579, L25.
ADS
- Camilo F. et al. 2004, ApJ, 611, L25.
ADS
- Carey S. J. et al. 2009, PASP, 121, 76.
ADS
- Castelletti G., Supan L., Petriella A., Giacani E. & Joshi B. C. 2017, A&A, 602, A31.
ADS
- Caswell J. L. 1985, AJ, 90, 1224.
ADS
- Caswell J. L. & Stewart R. T. 1991, PASA, 9, 103.
ADS
- Chang C., Pavlov G. G., Kargaltsev O. & Shibanov Y. A. 2012, ApJ, 744, 81.
ADS
- Channan G. A., Helfand D. J., Spinrad H. & Ebneter K. 1986, Nature, 320, 41.
ADS
- Chen X. et al. 2023, AJ, 165, 16.
ADS
- Cherepashchuk A. M., Goranskij V. P., Karitskaya E. A., Nadjip A. E., Savage A., Shakura N. I., Sunyaev R. A. & Volchkov A. A. 1994, A&A, 289, 419.
ADS
- Churazov E. M., Khabibullin I. I., Bykov A. M., Chugai N. N., Sunyaev R. A. & Zinchenko I. I. 2021, MNRAS, 507, 971.
ADS
- Churazov E. M., Khabibullin I. I., Bykov A. M., Chugai N. N., Sunyaev R. A. & Zinchenko I. I. 2022, MNRAS, 513, L83.
ADS
- Cichowolski S., Pineault S., Gamen R., Arnal E. M., Suad L. A. & Ortega M. E. et al. 2014, MNRAS, 438, 1089.
ADS
- Clark S. J., Steele I. A. & Langer N. 2000, ApJ, 541, L67.
ADS
- Coil A. L. & Ho P. T. P. 2000, ApJ, 533, 245.
ADS
- Colomb F. R., Dubner G. M. & Giacani E. B. 1984, A&A, 130, 294.
ADS
- Combi J. A. & Romero G. E. 1998, A&AS, 128, 423.
ADS
- Combi J. A., Romero G. E. & Arnal E. M. 1998, A&A, 333, 298.
ADS
- Combi J. A., Romero G. E. & Benaglia P. 1998, A&A, 333, L91.
ADS
- Combi J. A., Testori J. C., Romero G. E. & Colomb F. R. 1995, A&A, 296, 514.
ADS
- Combi J. A., Romero G. E., Benaglia P. & Jonas J. L. 2001, A&A, 366, 1047.
ADS
- Condon J. J., Cotton W. D., Greisen E. W., Yin Q. F., Perley R. A., Taylor G. B. & Broderick J. J. 1998, AJ, 115, 1693.
ADS
- Corbel S. & Eikenberry S. S. 2004, A&A, 419, 191.
ADS
- Cotton W. D. et al. 2022, ApJ, 934, 78.
ADS
- Cowan J. J., Ekers R. D., Goss W. M., Sramek R. A., Roberts D. A. & Branch D. 1989, MNRAS, 241, 613.
ADS
- Craig W. W., Hailey C. J. & Pisarski R. L. 1997, ApJ, 488, 307.
ADS
- Danilenko A., Kirichenko A., Mennickent R. E., Pavlov G., Shibanov Yu., Zharikov S. & Zyuzin D. 2012, A&A, 540, A28.
ADS
- de Muizon M., Strom R. G., Oort M. J. A., Claas J. J. & Braun R. 1988, A&A, 193, 248.
ADS
- Demetroullas C. et al. 2015, MNRAS, 453, 2082.
ADS
- Dewdney P. E. & Lozinskaya T. A. 1994, AJ, 108, 2212.
ADS
- Dexter J. et al. 2017, MNRAS, 471, 3563.
ADS
- Dickel J. R. & Milne D. K. 1972, AuJPh, 25, 539.
ADS
- Dokara R. et al. 2018, ApJ, 866, 61.
ADS
- Dokara R. et al. 2021, A&A, 651, A86.
ADS
- Dokara R. et al. 2023, A&A, 671, A145.
ADS
- Downes D. 1971, AJ, 76, 305.
ADS
- Driessen L. N., Domček V., Hessels J. W. T., Arias M. & Gelfand J. D. 2018, ApJ, 860, 133.
ADS
- Dubner G. M., Colomb F. R. & Giacani E. B. 1986, AJ, 91, 343.
ADS
- Dubner G. M., Braun R., Winkler P. F. & Goss 1991, AJ, 101, 1466.
ADS
- Dubner G., Giacani E., Cappa de Nicolau C. & Reynoso E. 1992, A&AS, 96, 505.
ADS
- Duncan A. R., Stewart R. T., Haynes R. F. & Jones K. L. 1995, MNRAS, 277, 36.
ADS
- Duncan A. R., Stewart R. T., Haynes R. F. & Jones K. L. 1996, MNRAS, 280, 252.
ADS
- Duncan A. R., Stewart R. T., Haynes R. F. & Jones K. L. 1997, MNRAS, 287, 722.
ADS
- Duvidovich L. & Petriella A. 2023, A&A, 672, A195.
ADS
- Dzib S. A., Rodrígrues L. F., Karuppusamy R., Loinard L. Medina & Sac-Nicté X. 2018, ApJ, 866, 100.
ADS
- Esipov V. F., Lozinskaya T. A., Mel’nikov V. V., Pravdikova V. V., Sitnik T. G. & Nichol-Bohlin J. 1996, AstL, 22, 509.
ADS
- Esposito P., de Luca A., Tiengo A., Paizis A., Mereghetti S. & Caraveo P. A. 2008, MNRAS, 384, 225.
ADS
- Ferrand G. & Safi-Harb S. 2012, AdSpR, 49, 1313.
ADS
- Fesen R. A. & Milisavljevic D. 2010, AJ, 139, 2595.
ADS
- Fesen R. A. & Hurford A. P. 1996, ApJS, 106, 563.
ADS
- Fesen R. A. et al. 2021, ApJ, 920, 90.
ADS
- Fesen R. A., Schaefer B. E. & Patchick D. 2023, ApJ, 945, L4.
ADS
- Fiedler R., Pauls T., Johnston K. J. & Dennison B. 1994, ApJ, 430, 595.
ADS
- Filipović M. D. et al. 2023, AJ, 166, 149.
ADS
- Finley J. P., Srinivasan R. & Park S. 1996, ApJ, 466, 938.
ADS
- Foster T., Kothes R., Sun X. H., Reich W. & Han J. L. 2006, A&A, 454, 517.
ADS
- Foster T. J., Kothes R., Kerton C. R. & Arvidsson K. 2007, ApJ, 667, 248.
ADS
- Frail D. A., Goss W. M. & Whiteoak J. B. Z. 1994, ApJ, 437, 781.
ADS
- Franco G. A. P. 2002, MNRAS, 331, 474.
ADS
- Frew D. J., Bojičić I. S. & Parker Q. A. 2013, MNRAS, 431, 2.
ADS
- Frew D. J. et al. 2014, MNRAS, 440, 1345.
ADS
- Froebrich D. et al. 2015, MNRAS, 454, 2586.
ADS
- Fürst E., Reich W., Reich P. & Reif K. 1990a, A&AS, 85, 691.
ADS
- Fürst E., Reich W., Reich P. & Reif K. 1990b, A&AS, 85, 805.
ADS
- Gaensler B. M. 1998, ApJ, 493, 781.
ADS
- Gaensler B. M., Stappers B. W., Frail D. A., Moffett D. A., Johnston S. & Chatterjee S. 2000, MNRAS, 318, 58.
ADS
- Gaensler B. M., Slane P. O., Gotthelf E. V. & Vasisht G. 2001, ApJ, 559, 963.
ADS
- Gaensler B. M. et al. 2008, ApJ, 680, L37.
ADS
- Gahm G. F., Gebeyehu M., Lindgren M., Magnusson P., Modigh P. & Nordh H. L. 1990, A&A, 228, 477.
ADS
- Gallo E., Fender R., Kaiser C., Russell D., Morganti R., Oosterloo T. & Heinz S. 2005, Nature, 436, 819.
ADS
- Gao X. Y. & Han J. L. 2013, A&A, 551, A16.
ADS
- Gao X. Y. & Han J. L. 2014, A&A, 567, A59.
ADS
- Gao X. Y. et al. 2010, A&A, 515, A64.
ADS
- Gao X. Y., Han J. L., Reich W., Reich P., Sun X. H. & Xiao L. 2011, A&A, 529, A159.
ADS
- Gao X. Y., Reich P., Hou L. G., Reich W. & Han J. L. 2019, A&A, 623, A105.
ADS
- Gao X. Y., Reich W., Sun X. H., Zhao H., Hong T., Yuan Z. S., Reich P. & Han J. L. 2022, SCPMA, 65, 129705.
ADS
- Gerbrandt S., Foster T. J., Kothes R., Geisbüsch J. & Tung A. 2014, A&A, 566, A76.
ADS
- Ghavamian P., Seitenzahl I., Vogt F. & Ruiter A. 2019, in ‘Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar Death II’, id. 134.
ADS
- Giveon U., Becker R. H., Helfand D. J. & White R. L. 2005, AJ, 129, 348.
ADS
- Gómez-González J. & del Romero A. 1983, A&A, 123, L5.
ADS
- Gorham P. W. 1990, ApJ, 364, 187.
ADS
- Gorham P. W., Kulkarni S. K. & Prince T. A. 1993, AJ, 105, 314.
ADS
- Gosachinskiĭ I. V. 1985, SvA, 29, 128.
ADS
- Goss W. M. & Lozinskaya T. A. 1995, ApJ, 439, 637.
ADS
- Goss W. M., Matthews H. E. & Winnberg A. 1978, A&A, 65, 307.
ADS
- Gray A. D. 1994a, MNRAS, 270, 835.
ADS
- Gray A. D. 1994b, MNRAS, 270, 847.
ADS
- Green A. J., Reeves S. N. & Murphy T. 2014, PASA, 31, 42.
ADS
- Green A. J., Cram L. E., Large M. I. & Ye T. S. 1999, ApJS, 122, 207.
ADS
- Green D. A. 1984, MNRAS, 209, 449. (Version I)
ADS
- Green D. A. 1986, MNRAS, 219, 39P.
ADS
- Green D. A. 1988, Ap&SS, 148, 3. (Version II)
ADS
- Green D. A. 1990a, AJ, 100, 1241.
ADS
- Green D. A. 1990b, AJ, 100, 1927.
ADS
- Green D. A. 1991, PASP, 103, 209. (Version III)
ADS
- Green D. A. 1996, in Supernovae and Supernova Remnants, (IAU Colloquium 145), eds McCray R. & Wang Z., (Cambridge University Press), p.419. (Version IV)
ADS
- Green D. A. 2004, BASI, 32, 335. (Version V)
ADS
- Green D. A. 2009, BASI, 37, 45. (Version VI)
ADS
- Green D. A. 2014, BASI, 42, 47. (Version VII)
ADS
- Green D. A. 2019, JApA, 40, 36. (Version VIII)
ADS
- Green D. A. 2022, MNRAS, 516, 3773.
ADS
- Green D. A. & Gull S. F. 1984, Nature, 312, 527.
ADS
- Green D. A. & Gull S. F. 1986, Nature, 320, 42.
ADS
- Green D. A. & Joncas G. 1994, A&AS, 104, 481.
ADS
- Grenier I. A., Lebrun F., Arnaud M., Dame T. M. & Thaddeus P. 1989, ApJ, 347, 231.
ADS
- Hailey C. J. & Craig W. W. 1995, ApJ, 455, L151.
ADS
- Halpern J. P., Camilo F., Gotthelf E. V., Helfand D. J., Kramer M., Lyne A. G., Leighly K. M. & Eracleous M. 2001, ApJ, 552, L125.
ADS
- Haverkorn M., Gaensler B. M., McClure-Griffiths N. M., Dickey J. M. & Green A. J. 2006, ApJS, 167, 230.
ADS
- Heard V. & Warwick R. S. 2013, MNRAS, 434, 1339.
ADS
- Heiles C. 1998, ApJ, 498, 689.
ADS
- Helfand D. J. & Channan G. A. 1989, AJ, 98, 1652.
ADS
- Helfand D. J., Becker R. H., White R. L., Fallon A. & Tuttle S. 2006, AJ, 131, 2525.
ADS
- Henley D. B. & Shelton R. L. 2009, ApJ, 701, 1880.
ADS
- Henshaw J. D. et al. 2019, MNRAS, 485, 2457.
ADS
- H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla H. et al. 2018a, A&A, 612, A1.
ADS
- H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla H. et al. 2018b, A&A, 612, A8.
ADS
- H.E.S.S. Collaboration: Abdalla H. et al. 2020, A&A, 644, A112.
ADS
- Hewitt J. W. & Yusef-Zadeh F. 2009, ApJ, 694, L16.
ADS
- Heywood I. et al. 2022, ApJ, 925, 165.
ADS
- Ho P. T., Jackson J. M., Barrett A. H. & Armstrong J. T. 1985, ApJ, 288, 575.
ADS
- Hurley-Walker N. et al. 2019a, PASA, 36, e048.
ADS
- Hurley-Walker N. et al. 2019b, PASA, 36, e045.
ADS
- Hurley-Walker N. et al. 2019c, PASA, 36, e047.
ADS
- Ibrahim A. Y. et al. 2023, ApJ, 943, 20.
ADS
- Ingallinera A. et al. 2019, MNRAS, 490, 5063.
ADS
- Inui T., Koyama K., Matsumoto H. & Tsuru T. G. 2009, PASJ, 61, S241.
ADS
- Israël F. P. 1977, A&A, 60, 233.
ADS
- Iwashita R., Kataoka J. & Sofue Y. 2023, ApJ, 958, 83.
ADS
- Jackson M. S., Safi-Harb S. & Kothes R. 2014, MNRAS, 444, 2228.
ADS
- Johanson A. K. & Kerton C. R. 2009, AJ, 138, 1615.
ADS
- Johnson S. P., Dong H. & Wang Q. D. 2009, MNRAS, 399, 1429.
ADS
- Johnston S. & Lower M. E. 2021, MNRAS, 507, L41.
ADS
- Joncas G., Higgs L. A. 1990, A&AS, 82, 113.
ADS
- Jones B. B. 1973, AuJPh, 26, 545.
ADS
- Jones T. J., Garwood R. & Dickey J. M. 1988, ApJ, 328, 559.
ADS
- Joubert T.,Castro D., Slane P. & Gelfand J. 2016, ApJ, 816, 63.
ADS
- Kalcheva I. E., Hoare M. G., Urquhart J. S., Kurtz S., Lumsden S. L., Purcell C. R. & Zijlstra A. A. 2018, A&A, 615, A103.
ADS
- Kallas E. & Reich W. 1980, A&AS, 42, 227.
ADS
- Kang J.-H. & Koo B.-C. 2007, ApJS, 173, 85.
ADS
- Kang J., Koo B.-C. & Byun D.-Y. 2014, JKAS, 47, 259.
ADS
- Kang J., Koo B.-C. & Salter C. 2012, AJ, 143, 75.
ADS
- Kaplan D. L., Kulkarni S. R., Frail D. A. & van Kerkwijk M. H. 2002, ApJ, 566, 378.
ADS
- Kargaltsev O. & Pavlov G. G. 2007, ApJ, 670, 655.
ADS
- Kargaltsev O., Schmitt B. M., Pavlov G. G. & Misanovic Z. 2012, ApJ, 745, 99.
ADS
- Karpova A. V., Zyuzin D. A. & Shibanov Y. A. 2019, MNRAS, 487, 1964.
ADS
- Karska A. et al. 2022, A&A, 663, A133.
ADS
- Kaspi V. M., Roberts M. S. E. & Harding A. K. 2006, in Compact stellar X-ray sources, (Cambridge Astrophysics Series, Volume 39), eds by Lewin W. & van der Klis M., (Cambridge University Press), p279.
ADS
- Kassim N. E. 1988a, ApJ, 328, L55.
ADS
- Kassim N. E. 1988b, ApJS, 68, 715.
ADS
- Kassim N. E. 1989, ApJS, 71, 799.
ADS
- Kerton C. R. 2006, MNRAS, 373, 1203.
ADS
- Kerton C. R., Murphy J. & Patterson J. 2007, MNRAS, 379, 289.
ADS
- Khabibullin I. I., Churazov E. M., Bykov A. M., Chugai N. N. & Sunyaev R. A. 2023, MNRAS, 521, 5536.
ADS
- Kim K.-T. & Koo B.-C. 2000, ApJ, 529, 229.
ADS
- Knies J. R., Sasaki M. & Plucinsky P. P. 2018, MNRAS, 477, 4414.
ADS
- Koo B.-C. & Heiles C. 1991, ApJ, 382, 204.
ADS
- Koo B.-C., Kang J. H. & Salter C. J. 2006, ApJ, 643, L49.
ADS
- Kothes R. 2003, A&A, 408, 187.
ADS
- Kothes R., Fedotov K., Foster T. J. & Uyanıker B. 2006, A&A, 457, 1081.
ADS
- Kothes R., Sun X. H., Reich W. & Foster T. J. 2014, ApJ, 784, L26.
ADS
- Kovalenko A. V. 1989, SvAL, 15, 144.
ADS
- Kovalenko A. V., Pynzar’ A. V. & Udal’tsov V. A. 1994, ARep, 38, 95.
ADS
- Koyama K. et al. 2007, PASJ, 59, S221.
ADS
- Koyama K. 2018, PASJ, 70, R1.
ADS
- Kulkarni S. R., Vogel S. N., Wang Z. & Wood D. O. S. 1992, Nature, 360, 139.
ADS
- Landecker T. L., Higgs L. A. & Wendker H. I. 1993, A&A, 276, 522.
ADS
- Langston G., Minter A., D’Addario L., Eberhart K., Koski K. & Zuber J. 2000, AJ, 119, 2801.
ADS
- LaRosa T. N., Kassim N. E., Lazio T. J. W. & Hyman S. D. 2000, AJ, 119, 207.
ADS
- Law C. J., Yusef-Zadeh F. & Cotton W. D. 2008, ApJS, 177, 515.
ADS
- Lazio T. J. W., Anantharamaiah K. R., Goss W. M., Kassim N. E. & Cordes J. M. 1999, ApJ, 515, 196.
ADS
- Leahy D. A., Nousek J. & Garmire G. 1992, ApJ, 385, 561.
ADS
- Leahy D. A., Tian W. & Wang Q. D. 2008, AJ, 136, 1477.
ADS
- Lee H.-T., Takami M., Duan H.-Y., Karr J., Su Y.-N., Liu S.-Y., Froebrich D. & Yeh C. C. 2012, ApJS, 200, 2.
ADS
- Leto P., Umana G., Trigilio C., Buemi C. S., Dolei S., Manzitto P., Cerrigone L. & Siringo C. 2009, A&A, 507, 1467.
ADS
- Li Y., Liu S. & He Y. 2023, ApJ, 953, 100.
ADS
- Lu F. J., Wang Q. D. & Lang C. C. 2003, AJ, 126, 319.
ADS
- Lykou F., Parker Q. A., Ritter A., Zijlstra A. A., Hillier D. J., Guerrero M. A. & Le Dû P. 2023, ApJ, 944, 120.
ADS
- Lynds B. T. 1965, ApJS, 12, 163.
ADS
- Maciejewski W., Murphy E. M., Lockman F. J. & Savage B. D. 1996, ApJ, 469, 238.
ADS
- MAGIC Collaboration: Acciari V. A. et al. 2020, MNRAS, 497, 3734.
ADS
- McClure-Griffiths N. M., Green A. J., Dickey J. M., Gaensler B. M., Haynes R. F. & Wieringa M. H. 2001, ApJ, 551, 394.
ADS
- McCullough P. R., Fields B. D. & Pavlidou V. 2002, ApJ, 576, L41.
ADS
- Manchester R. N. et al. 2002, in Neutron Stars in Supernova Remnants, (ASP Conference Series, Volume 271), eds Slane P. O. & Gaensler B. M., (ASP, San Francisco), p.31.
ADS
- Marston A. P. 1996, AJ, 112, 2828.
ADS
- Martí J., Combi J. A., Pérez-Ramírez D., Garrido J. L., Luque-Escamilla P., Muñoz-Arjonilla A. J. & Sánchez-Sutil J. R. 2007, A&A, 462, 1065.
ADS
- Martí J., Luque-Escamilla P. L. & Sánchez-Ayaso E. 2023, A&A, 673, A55.
ADS
- Mavromatakis F. & Strom R. G. 2002, A&A, 382, 291.
ADS
- Mavromatakis F., Boumis P. & Paleologou E. V. 2002, A&A, 387, 635.
ADS
- Mavromatakis F., Boumis P., Xilouris E., Papamastorakis J. & Alikakos J. 2005, A&A, 435, 141.
ADS
- Mavromatakis F., Boumis P., Meaburn J. & Caulet A. 2009, A&A, 503, 129.
ADS
- Maxted N. I. et al. 2019, ApJ, 885, 129.
ADS
- Millard M. J., Ravi A. P., Rho J. & Park S. 2021, ApJS, 257, 36.
ADS
- Milne D. K. 1970, AuJPh, 23, 425.
ADS
- Misanovic Z., Cram L. & Green A. 2002, MNRAS, 335, 114.
ADS
- Mizuno D. R. et al. 2010, AJ, 139, 1542.
ADS
- Mori H., Tsuru T. G., Hyodo Y., Koyama K. & Senda A. 2008, PASJ, 60, S183.
ADS
- Morris P. W., Stolovy S., Wachter S., Noriega-Crespo A., Pannuti T. G. & Hoard D. W. 2006, ApJ, 640, L179.
ADS
- Motta S. E., Turner J. D., Stappers B., Fender R. P., Heywood I., Kramer M. & Barr E. D. 2023, MNRAS, 523, 2850.
ADS
- Murphy T., Mauch T., Green A., Hunstead R. W., Piestrzynska B., Kels A. P. & Sztajer P. 2007, MNRAS, 382, 382.
ADS
- Nakashima S., Nobukawa M., Tsuru T. G., Koyama K. & Uchiyama H. 2010, PASJ, 62, 971.
ADS
- Naranan S., Shulman S., Friedman H. & Fritz G. 1976, ApJ, 208, 718.
ADS
- Ng C.-Y., Gaensler B. M., Chatterjee S. & Johnston S. 2010, ApJ, 712, 596.
ADS
- Nichols-Bohlin J. & Fesen R. A. 1993, AJ, 105, 672.
ADS
- Nobukawa M. et al. 2008, PASJ, 60, S191.
ADS
- Nobukawa K. K., Nobukawa M., Tsuru T. G. & Koyama K. 2015, AdSpR, 55, 2493.
ADS
- Normandeau M., Taylor A. R., Dewdney P. E. & Basu S. 2000, AJ, 119, 2982.
ADS
- Nousek J. A., Cowie L. L., Hu E., Lindblad C. J. & Garmire G. P. 1981, ApJ, 248, 152.
ADS
- Odegard N. 1986, AJ, 92, 1372.
ADS
- Olano C. A., Meschin P. I. & Niemela V. S. 2006, MNRAS, 369, 867.
ADS
- Onello J. S., DePree C. G., Phillips J. A. & Goss W. M. 1995, ApJ, 449, L127.
ADS
- Pagani L., Lefèvre C., Bacmann A. & Steinacker J. 2012, A&A, 541, A154.
ADS
- Palaiologou E. V., Leonidaki I. & Kopsacheili M. 2022, MNRAS, 515, 339.
ADS
- Panopoulou G. V., Dickinson C., Readhead A. C. S., Pearson T. J. & Peel M. W. 2021, ApJ, 922, 210.
ADS
- Parker Q. A. et al. 2006, MNRAS, 373, 79.
ADS
- Pauls T. & Schwartz P. R. 1989, in The Physics and Chemistry of Interstellar Molecular Clouds, (Lecture Notes in Physics, Volume 331), eds Winnewisser G. & Armstrong T. J., (Springer), p.225.
ADS
- Pavlov G. G., Kargaltsev O. & Brisken W. F. 2008, ApJ, 675, 683.
ADS
- Perley R. A. & Butler B. J. 2017, ApJS, 230, 7.
ADS
- Petriella A. 2019, A&A, 626, A65.
ADS
- Phillips J. P. & Ramos-Larios G. 2008, MNRAS, 390, 1170.
ADS
- Phillips J. A., Onello J. S. & Kulkarni S. R. 1993, ApJ, 415, L143.
ADS
- Pineault S. & Chastenay P. 1990, MNRAS, 246, 169.
ADS
- Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Noriega-Crespo A., Paladini R., Martin P. G. & Carey S. J. 2011, AJ, 142, 47.
ADS
- Plucinsky P. P. 2009, in The Local Bubble and Beyond II, (AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1156), eds Kuntz K. D., Smith R. K. & Snowden S. L. (American Institute of Physics), p.231.
ADS
- Plucinsky P. P., Snowden S. L., Aschenbach B., Eggar R., Edgar R. J. & McCammon D. 1996, ApJ, 463, 224.
ADS
- Pol N. et al. 2021, ApJ, 911, 121.
ADS
- Polcaro V. F., Rossi C., Norci L. & Viotti R. 1995, A&A, 303, 211.
ADS
- Ponti G. et al. 2015, MNRAS, 453, 172.
ADS
- Ponti G. et al. 2019, Nature, 567, 347.
ADS
- Prajapati P., Tej A., del Palacio S., Benaglia P., CH I.-C., Vig S., Mandal S. & Kanti Ghosh S. 2019, ApJ, 884, L49.
ADS
- Predehl P. & Kulkarni S. R. 1995, A&A, 294, L29.
ADS
- Proctor D. D. 2016, ApJS, 224, 18.
ADS
- Punsly B., Romero G. E., Torres D. F. & Combi J. A. 2000, A&A, 364, 552.
ADS
- Purcell C. R. et al. 2015, ApJ, 804, 22.
ADS
- Ranasinghe S., Leahy D. & Stil J. 2021, Universe, 7, 338.
ADS
- Reach W. T. et al. 2006, AJ, 131, 1479.
ADS
- Rector T. A. & Schweiker H. 2013, AJ, 145, 35.
ADS
- Reich W. 2002, in Neutron Stars, Pulsars, and Supernova Remnants, (MPE Report 278), eds Becker W., Lesch H. & Trümper J., (Max-Plank-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching bei München), p1.
ADS
- Reich W. & Sun X.-H. 2019, RAA, 19, 45.
ADS
- Reich W., Reich P. & Sun X. 2020, A&A, 641, A121.
ADS
- Reich W., Fürst E., Altenhoff W. J., Reich P. & Junkes N. 1985, A&A, 151, L10.
ADS
- Reich W., Fürst E., Reich P. & Reif K. 1990, A&AS, 85, 633.
ADS
- Reipurth B., Bally J. & Divine D. 1997, AJ, 114, 2708.
ADS
- Remy Q., Grenier I. A., Marshall D. J., Casandjian J. M. 2018, A&A, 616, A71.
ADS
- Renaud M., Paron S., Terrier R., Lebrun F., Dubner G., Giacani E. & Bykov A. M. 2006, ApJ, 638, 220.
ADS
- Retallack D. S. 1983, MNRAS, 204, 669.
ADS
- Reynolds R. 1976, ApJ, 206, 679.
ADS
- Reynolds M. T. et al. 2012, ATel, 3963.
ADS
- Reynolds S. P. & Borkowski K. J. 2016, ApJ, 816, L27.
ADS
- Reynoso E. M. & Dubner G. M. 1997, A&AS, 123, 31.
ADS
- Rho J. & Petre R. 1998, ApJ, 503, L167.
ADS
- Ridge N. A., Schnee S. L., Goodman A. A. & Foster J. B. 2006, ApJ, 643, 932.
ADS
- Riegler G. R., Agrawal P. C. & Gull S. F. 1980, ApJ, 235, L71.
ADS
- Ritter A., Parker Q. A., Lykou F., Zijlstra A. A., Guerrero M. A. & Le Dû P. 2021, ApJ, 918, L33.
ADS
- Roberts M. S. E., Romani R. W., Johnston S. & Green A. J. 1999, ApJ, 515, 712.
ADS
- Roberts M. S. E., Romani R. W. & Johnston S. 2001, ApJ, 561, L187.
ADS
- Rosado M., Raga A. C. & Arias L. 1999, AJ, 117, 462.
ADS
- Routledge D. & Vaneldik J. F. 1988, ApJ, 326, 751.
ADS
- Roy S. & Pal S. 2013, ApJ, 774, 150.
ADS
- Roy S. & Pramesh Rao A. 2002, MNRAS, 329, 775.
ADS
- Russeil D., Adami C., Amram P., Le Coarer E., Georgelin Y. M., Marcelin M. & Parker Q. 2005, A&A, 429, 497.
ADS
- Russell D. M., Fender R. P., Gallo E. & Kaiser C. R. 2007, MNRAS, 376, 1341.
ADS
- Ryu K. et al. 2006, ApJ, 644, L185.
ADS
- Saha L. & Bhattacharjee P. 2014, in Supernova Environmental Impacts, (IAU Symposium 296), eds Ray A. & McCray R. A., (Cambridge University Press), p300.
ADS
- Saken J. M., Fesen R. A. & Shull J. M. 1992, ApJS, 81, 715.
ADS
- Sallmen S. M., Korpella E. J., Bellehauser B., Tennyson E. M., Grunwald K. & Lo C. M. 2015, AJ, 149, 189.
ADS
- Salter C. J., Patnaik A. R., Shaver P. A. & Hunt G. C. 1986, A&A, 162, 217.
ADS
- Sarma A. P., Goss W. M., Green A. J. & Frail D. A. 1997, ApJ, 483, 335.
ADS
- Sawada M., Tsujimoto M., Koyama K., Law C. J., Tsuru T. G. & Hyodo Y. 2009, PASJ, 61, S209.
ADS
- Schaudel D., Becker W., Voges W., Aschenbach B., Reich W. & Weisskopf M. 2002, in Neutron Stars in Supernova Remnants, (ASP Conference Series, Volume 271), eds Slane P. O. & Gaensler B. M., (ASP, San Francisco), p.391.
ADS
- Sell P. H. et al. 2015, MNRAS, 446, 3579.
ADS
- Senda A., Murakami H. & Koyama K. 2002, ApJ, 565, 1017.
ADS
- Senda A., Murakami H. & Koyama K. 2003, AN, 324 (Supplement 1), 151.
ADS
- Shan S. S., Zhu H., Tian W. W., Zhang M. F., Zhang H. Y., Wu D. & Yang A. Y. 2018, ApJS, 238, 35.
ADS
- Shan S.-S., Zhu H., Tian W.-W., Zhang H.-Y., Yang A.-Y. & Zhang M.-F. 2019, RAA, 19, 92.
ADS
- Shinn J.-H. et al. 2007, ApJ, 670, 1132.
ADS
- Sidorin V., Douglas K. A., Palouš J., Wünsch R. & Ehlerová S. 2014, A&A, 565, A6.
ADS
- Simpson R. J. et al. 2012, MNRAS, 424, 2442.
ADS
- Simpson J. P. 2018, ApJ, 857, 59.
ADS
- Snowden S. L., Burrows D. N., Sanders W. T., Aschenbach B. & Pfeffermann E. 1995, ApJ, 439, 399.
ADS
- Soberski S., Reich W. & Wielebinski R. 2005, in Astronomical Polarimetry: Current Status and Future Directions, (ASP Conference Series, Volume 343), eds Adamson A., Aspin C., Davis C. J. & Fujiyoshi T., (ASP, San Francisco), p.286.
ADS
- Sofue Y. 2020, PASJ, 72, L11.
ADS
- Sofue Y. 2021, Galaxies, 9, 13.
ADS
- Sofue Y., Kataoka J. & Iwashita R. 2023, MNRAS, 524, 4212.
ADS
- Sramek R. A., Cowan J. J., Roberts D. A., Goss W. M. & Ekers R. D. 1992, AJ, 104, 704.
ADS
- Stephenson F. R. & Green D. A. 2002, Historical Supernovae and their Remnants, (Oxford University Press).
ADS
- Stil J. M. & Irwin J. A. 2001, ApJ, 563, 816.
ADS
- Stil J. M. et al. 2006, AJ, 132, 1158.
ADS
- Stupar M. & Parker Q. A. 2011, MNRAS, 414, 2282.
ADS
- Stupar M., Parker Q. A. & Filipović M. D. 2008, MNRAS, 390, 1037.
ADS
- Stupar M., Parker Q. A. & Filipović M. D. 2010, MNRAS, 401, 1760.
ADS
- Stupar M., Parker Q. A. & Filipović M. D. 2011, Ap&SS, 332, 241.
ADS
- Stupar M., Parker Q. A. & Frew D. J. 2018, MNRAS, 479, 4432.
ADS
- Su Y., Zhou X., Yang J., Chen Y., Chen X., Gong Y. & Zhang S. 2017, ApJ, 845, 48.
ADS
- Subrahmanyan R. & Goss W. M. 1996, MNRAS, 281, 239.
ADS
- Subrahmanyan R., Ekers R. D., Wilson W. E., Goss W. M. & Allen D. A. 1993, MNRAS, 263, 868.
ADS
- Sun X. H., Han J. L., Reich W., Reich P., Shi W. B., Wielebinski R. & Fürst E. 2007, A&A, 463, 993.
ADS
- Sun X. H., Reich P., Reich W., Xiao L., Gao X. Y. & Han J. L. 2011, A&A, 536, A83.
ADS
- Sun X.-N., Yang R.-Z. & Liang E.-W. 2022, A&A, 659, A83.
ADS
- Supan L., Castelletti G., Peters W. M. & Kassim N. E. 2018, A&A, 616, A98.
ADS
- Sushch I., Oya I., Schwanke U., Johnston S. & Dalton M. L. 2017, A&A, 605, A115.
ADS
- Sutherland R. S. & Dopita M. A. 1995, ApJ, 439, 365.
ADS
- Tateyama C. E., Strauss F. M. & Kaufmann P. 1991, MNRAS, 249, 716.
ADS
- Taylor A. R., Wallace B. J. & Goss W. M. 1992, AJ, 103, 931.
ADS
- Taylor A. R. et al. 2003, AJ, 125, 3145.
ADS
- Terrier R., Clavel M., Soldi S., Goldwurm A., Ponti G., Morris M. R., Chuard D. 2018, A&A, 612, A102.
ADS
- Thompson D. J., Djorgovski S. & de Carvalho R. R. 1991, PASP, 103, 487.
ADS
- Thorsett S. E., Benjamin R. A., Brisken W. F., Golden A. & Goss W. M. 2003, ApJ, 592, L71.
ADS
- Todt H. et al. 2013, MNRAS, 430, 2302.
ADS
- Tomsick J. A., Chaty S., Rodriguez J., Walter R. & Kaaret P. 2009, ApJ, 701, 811.
ADS
- Trushkin S. A. 1990, BSAO, 32, 109.
ADS
- Trushkin S. A. 1998, BSAO, 46, 62.
ADS
- Trushkin S. A. 2001, in Exploring the gamma-ray universe, eds Battrick N., Gimenez A., Reglero V. & Winkler C., (ESA, Noordwijk), p109.
ADS
- Tsuru T. G., Nobukawa M., Nakajima H., Matsumoto H., Koyama K. & Yamauchi S. 2009, PASJ, 61, S219.
ADS
- Tung A. K. et al. 2017, AJ, 154, 156.
ADS
- Ueno M., Yamaguchi H., Koyama K., Bamba A., Yamauchi S. & Ebisawa K. 2005, in X-Ray and Radio Connections, eds Sjouwerman L. O. & Dyer K. K., E4.18.
ADS
- Ueno M., Yamauchi S., Bamba A., Yamaguchi H., Koyama K. & Ebisawa K. 2006, in Populations of High Energy Sources in Galaxies, (IAU Symposium 230), eds Meurs E. J. A. & Fabbiano G., (Cambridge University Press), p333.
ADS
- Uyanıker B. & Kothes R. 2002, ApJ, 574, 805.
ADS
- Veena V. S., Vig S., Roy N. & Roy J. 2019a, MNRAS, 488, L59.
ADS
- Veena V. S., Vig S., Sebastian B., Lal D. V., Tej A. & Ghosh S. K. 2019b, MNRAS, 482, 4630.
ADS
- Velusamy T., Goss W. M. & Arnal E. M. 1986, JApA, 7, 105.
ADS
- Voisin F. J. et al. 2019, PASA, 36, e014.
ADS
- Walker A. & Zealey W. J. 1998, PASA, 15, 79.
ADS
- Walker A., Zealey W. J. & Parker Q. A. 2001, PASA, 18, 259.
ADS
- Wang Q. D. 2021, MNRAS, 504, 1609.
ADS
- Wang Y. et al. 2018, A&A, 619, A124.
ADS
- Ward-Thompson D. & Robson E. I. 1991, MNRAS, 248, 670.
ADS
- Watanabe S., Yamauchi S., Nobukawa K. K. & Akamatsu H. 2019, PASJ, 71, 116.
ADS
- Watson C., Araya E., Sewilo M., Churchwell E., Hofner P. & Kurtz S. 2003, ApJ, 587, 714.
ADS
- Weiler K. W. & Shaver P. A. 1978, A&A, 65, 305.
ADS
- Weinberger R. 1995, PASP, 107, 58.
ADS
- Weinberger R., Temporin S. & Stecklum B. 2006, A&A, 448, 1095.
ADS
- Wendker H. I., Higgs L. A. & Landecker T. L. 1991, A&A, 241, 551.
ADS
- Wendker H. I., Higgs L. A., Landecker T. L. & Ward-Thompson D. 1993, MNRAS, 263, 543.
ADS
- White R. L. & Becker R. H. 1990, MNRAS, 244, 12P.
ADS
- White R. L., Becker R. H. & Helfand D. J. 2005, AJ, 130, 586.
ADS
- Whiteoak J. B. Z. & Green A. J. 1996, A&AS, 118, 329.
ADS
- Winkler P. F. & Reipurth B. 1992, ApJ, 389, L25.
ADS
- Winkler P. F., Kirshner R. P., Hughes J. P. & Heathcote S. R. 1989, Nature, 337, 48.
ADS
- Woermann B., Gaylard M. J. & Otrupcek R. 2001, MNRAS, 325, 1213.
ADS
- Xiao L. & Zhu M. 2014, MNRAS, 438, 1081.
ADS
- Xin Y. & Guo X. 2022, ApJ, 941, 194.
ADS
- Yamauchi S., Bamba A. & Koyama K. 2011, PASJ, 63, S957.
ADS
- Yamauchi S., Sumita M. & Bamba A. 2016, PASJ, 68, S6.
ADS
- Yamauchi S., Shimizu M., Nobukawa M., Nobukawa K. K., Uchiyama H. & Koyama K. 2018, PASJ, 70, 82.
ADS
- Yoshita K., Miyata E. & Tsunemi H. 1999, AN, 320, 344.
ADS
- Yoshita K., Miyata E. & Tsunemi H. 2000, PASJ, 52, 867.
ADS
- Yusef-Zadeh F., Cotton W. D. & Reynolds S. P. 1998, ApJ, 498, L55.
ADS
- Yusef-Zadeh F., Hewitt J. W. & Cotton W. 2004, ApJS, 155, 421.
ADS
- Yusef-Zadeh F., Shure M., Wardle M. & Kassim N. 2000, ApJ, 540, 842.
ADS
- Zanin C. & Kerber F. 2000, A&A, 356, 274.
ADS
- Zhang X. Z. 2003, AcASn, 44 (Supplement), 183.
ADS
- Zhang P. & Xin Y. 2023, ApJ, 951, 142.
ADS
- Zhang S. et al. 2014, ApJ, 784, 6.
ADS
- Zhang S. et al. 2020a, ApJ, 893, 3.
ADS
- Zhang H.-M., Xi S.-Q., Liu R.-Y., Xin Y.-L., Liu S. & Wang X.-Y. 2020b, ApJ, 889, 12.
ADS
- Zheng D., Wang Z., Zhang X., Chen Y. & Xing Y. 2023, ApJ, 952, 158.
ADS
- Zhong W.-J., Zhang X., Chen Y. & Zhang Q.-Q. 2023, MNRAS, 521, 1931.
ADS
- Zhou X. et al. 2023, ApJS, 268, 61.
ADS
- Zijlstra A. A. 1991, MNRAS, 248, 11P.
ADS
- Zychová L. & Ehlerová S. 2016, A&A, 595, A49.
ADS
Dave Green / Cambridge, UK /