The distance to the supernova remnant has been estimated to between 2 and 5
kpc (approx. 6,500 and 16,300
light-years), with recent studies suggesting a narrower range of 2.5 and 3 kpc (approximately 8,000 and 9,800 light-years). Tycho's SNR has a roughly spherical morphology and spreads over an angular diameter of about 8 arcminutes. Its physical size corresponds to radius of the order of a few parsecs. Its measured expansion rate is about 11–12%/year in radio and X-ray. The average forward shock speed is between 4,000 and 5,000 km/s, dropping to lower speed when encountering local interstellar clouds. An older source says that the gas shell has reached an apparent diameter of 3.7 arcminutes.
Initial radio detection The search for a supernova remnant was futile until 1952, when
Robert Hanbury Brown and
Cyril Hazard reported a radio detection at 158.5 MHz, obtained at the
Jodrell Bank Observatory. This was confirmed, and its position more accurately measured in 1957 by Baldwin and Edge using the Cambridge Radio Telescope working at a wavelength of . The remnant was also identified tentatively in the
second Cambridge Catalogue of Radio Sources as object "2C 34", and more firmly as "3C 10" in the
third Cambridge list. There is no dispute that 3C 10 is the remnant of the supernova observed in 1572–1573. Following a 1964 review article by Minkowski, the designation 3C 10 appears to be that most commonly used in the literature when referring to the radio remnant of B Cas, although some authors use the tabulated galactic designation G120.7+2.1 and many authors commonly refer to it as ''Tycho's supernova remnant''. Because the radio remnant was reported before the optical supernova-remnant wisps were discovered, the designation 3C 10 is used by some to signify the remnant at all wavelengths.
X-ray observation An X-ray source designated Cepheus X-1 (or Cep X-1) was detected by the
Uhuru X-ray observatory at 4U 0022+63. Earlier catalog designations are X120+2 and XRS 00224+638. Cepheus X-1 is actually in the constellation Cassiopeia, and it is SN 1572, the Tycho
SNR.
Optical detection infrared image is the remnant of SN 1572. The
supernova remnant of B Cas was discovered in the 1960s by scientists with a
Palomar Mountain telescope as a very faint
nebula. It was later photographed by a telescope on the international
ROSAT spacecraft. The supernova has been confirmed as
Type Ia, in which a
white dwarf star has accreted matter from a companion until it approaches the
Chandrasekhar limit and explodes. This type of supernova does not typically create the spectacular
nebula more typical of
Type II supernovas, such as
SN 1054 which created the
Crab Nebula. A shell of gas is still expanding from its center at about 9,000 km/s. A recent study indicates a rate of expansion below 5,000 km/s. ==Companion star==