SIMBAD references

2006ApJ...645.1421B - Astrophys. J., 645, 1421-1435 (2006/July-2)

A multiwavelength study of the pulsar PSR B1929+10 and its X-ray trail.

BECKER W., KRAMER M., JESSNER A., TAAM R.E., JIA J.J., CHENG K.S., MIGNANI R., PELLIZZONI A., DE LUCA A., SLOWIKOWSKA A. and CARAVEO P.A.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on the emission properties of PSR B1929+10 and its putative trail from a multiwavelength study performed using optical, X-ray, and radio data. XMM-Newton observations confirm the existence of the diffuse emission with a trail morphology lying in a direction opposite to the transverse motion of the pulsar. The trail spectrum is nonthermal and produced by electron-synchrotron emission in the shock between the pulsar wind and the surrounding medium. Radio data from the Effelsberg 11 cm radio continuum survey show an elongated feature that roughly coincides with the X-ray trail. Three not fully resolved radio sources seen in the NVSS survey data at 1.4 GHz match with part of the elongated radio feature seen at 11 cm. The emission properties observed from PSR B1929+10 are in excellent agreement with a nonthermal, and thus magnetospheric-radiation-dominated, emission scenario. The pulsar's X-ray spectrum is best described by a single power-law model with a photon index of 2.72+0.12–0.09. A flux contribution from the thermal emission of heated polar caps of at most ∼7% is inferred from a best-fitting composite Planckian and power-law spectral model. A pure thermal emission spectrum consisting of two Planckian spectra is regarded as unlikely. A broken power-law spectral model with Ebreak=0.83+0.05–0.03keV and the photon indexes α1=1.12+0.02–0.03 and α2=2.48+0.08–0.07can describe the optical and X-ray data entirely in terms of a nonthermal magnetospheric origin. The X-ray pulse profile observed in the 0.2-10 keV band is found to be markedly different from the broad sinusoidal pulse profile seen in the low statistic Röntgensatellit (ROSAT) data. Fitting Gaussians to the X-ray light curve indicates the possible existence of three pulse components. A small narrow pulse, characterized by energies greater than 1 keV, is found to lead the radio main pulse by ∼20°. The fraction of pulsed photons in the 0.2-10 keV band is 32%±4%. For the subbands 0.2-1.0 and 1.0-2.1 keV the pulsed fraction is 24%±5% and 44%±6%, respectively, indicating a mild energy dependence at a ∼2 σ level. Simulations in the framework of an outer gap emission model are able to reproduce the observed X-ray pulse profile and its phase shift relative to the radio pulse.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Stars: Pulsars: General - Stars: Pulsars: Individual: Alphanumeric: PSR B1929+10 - Stars: Neutron - X-Rays: Stars

Simbad objects: 11

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2006ApJ...645.1421B and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu