SIMBAD references

2007ApJ...665.1304H - Astrophys. J., 665, 1304-1310 (2007/August-3)

X-ray timing of PSR J1852+0040 in Kesteven 79: evidence of neutron stars weakly magnetized at birth.

HALPERN J.P., GOTTHELF E.V., CAMILO F. and SEWARD F.D.

Abstract (from CDS):

The 105 ms X-ray pulsar J1852+0040 is the central compact object (CCO) in supernova remnant Kes 79. We report a sensitive upper limit on its radio flux density of 12 µJy at 2 GHz using the NRAO Green Bank Telescope. Timing using the Newton X-Ray Multi-Mirror Mission (XMM-Newton) and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory over a 2.4 yr span reveals no significant change in its spin period. The 2 σ upper limit on the period derivative leads, in the dipole spin-down formalism, to an energy loss rate E{dot}<7x1033 ergs/s, surface magnetic field strength Bp<1.5x1011 G, and characteristic age τc≡P/2P{dot}>8 Myr. This value of τc exceeds the age of the SNR by 3 orders of magnitude, implying that the pulsar was born spinning at its current period. However, the X-ray luminosity of Lbol~3x1033(d/7.1 kpc)2 ergs/s is a large fraction of E{dot}, which challenges the rotation-powered assumption. Instead, its high blackbody temperature kTBB=0.46±0.04 keV, small blackbody radius RBB~0.8 km, and large pulsed fraction fp~80% may be evidence of accretion onto a polar cap, possibly from a fallback disk made of supernova debris. If Bp<1010 G, an accretion disk can penetrate the light cylinder and interact with the magnetosphere, while resulting torques on the neutron star remain within the observed limits. A weak B field is also inferred in another CCO, the 424 ms pulsar, from its steady spin and soft X-ray absorption lines. We propose this origin of radio-quiet CCOs: the magnetic field, derived from a turbulent dynamo, is weaker if the neutron star is formed spinning slowly, which enables it to accrete supernova debris. Accretion excludes neutron stars born with both Bp<1011 G and P>0.1 s from radio pulsar surveys, where Bp<1011 G is not encountered except among very old (τc>40 Myr) or recycled pulsars. Finally, such a CCO, if born in SN 1987A, could explain the nondetection of a pulsar there.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): ISM: Individual: Name: Kesteven 79 - ISM: Individual: Alphanumeric: SN 1987A - Stars: Pulsars: Individual: Alphanumeric: 1E 1207.4-5209 - pulsars: individual (CXOU J185238.6+004020) - pulsars: individual (PSR J1852+0040) - Stars: Neutron - ISM: Supernova Remnants

Simbad objects: 7

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