SIMBAD references

2001ApJ...554..316T - Astrophys. J., 554, 316-321 (2001/June-2)

Pulsed X-ray emission from the fastest millisecond pulsar: PSR B1937+21 with ASCA.

TAKAHASHI M., SHIBATA S., TORII K., SAITO Y., KAWAI N., HIRAYAMA M., DOTANI T., GUNJI S., SAKURAI H., STAIRS I.H. and MANCHESTER R.N.

Abstract (from CDS):

We have detected pulsed X-ray emission from the fastest millisecond pulsar known, PSR B1937+21 (P=1.558 ms), with ASCA. The pulsar is detected as a point source above ∼1.7 keV, with no indication of nebulosity. The source flux in the 2-10 keV band is found to be f=(3.7±0.6)x10–13 ergs.s–1.cm–2, which implies an isotropic luminosity of LX=4πD2f~(5.7±1.0)x1032(D/3.6 kpc)2 ergs.s–1, where D is the distance, and an X-ray efficiency of ∼5x10–4, relative to the spin-down power of the pulsar. The pulsation is found at the period predicted by the radio ephemeris with a very narrow primary peak, the width of which is about 1/16 phase (∼100 µs), near the time resolution limit (61 µs) of the observation. The instantaneous flux in the primary peak (1/16 phase interval) is found to be 4.0±0.8x10–12 ergs.s–1.cm–2. Although there is an indication for the secondary peak, we consider its statistical significance too low to claim a definite detection. The narrow pulse profile and the detection in the 2-10 keV band imply that the X-ray emission is caused by the magnetospheric particle acceleration. Comparison of X-ray and radio arrival times of pulses indicates, within the timing errors, that the X-ray pulse is coincident with the radio interpulse.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Stars: Pulsars: General - Stars: Pulsars: Individual: Alphanumeric: PSR B1937+21

Simbad objects: 11

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2001ApJ...554..316T and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu