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Pulsar Wind Nebulae

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Observations of. Pulsar Wind Nebulae. Jet/Torus Structure in PWNe. Anisotropic flux with maximum energy flux in equatorial zone - radial particle outflow - striped wind from Poynting flux decreases away from equator Wind termination shock is farther from - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA) Pulsar Wind Nebulae Observations of
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Page 1: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Pulsar Wind Nebulae

Observations of

Page 2: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Jet/Torus Structure in PWNe

Lyubarsky 2002

• Anisotropic flux with maximum energy flux in equatorial zone - radial particle outflow - striped wind from Poynting flux decreases away from equator

• Wind termination shock is farther from pulsar at equator than along axis

• Magnetization is low in equatorial region due to dissipation in striped wind (reconnection?) - no collimation along equator; an equatorial disk (i.e. torus) forms

• At higher latitudes, average B field is a maximum - this can turn the flow inward at high latitudes, collimating flow and forming a jet beyond TS, where flow is mildly (or non-) relativistic

F ≈Ω2ψ 0

2

4πc 2R2sin2 θ +

1

σ 0

⎝ ⎜

⎠ ⎟

Page 3: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Pulsar Wind Nebulae• Expansion boundary condition at forces wind termination shock at - wind goes from v = c/31/2 inside Rw to v ~ RN/t at outer boundary

wR

NR

• Pulsar accelerates particle wind- wind inflates bubble of particles and magnetic flux- particle flow in B-field creates synchrotron nebula

BlastWave

H or ejecta shell

- spectral break at where synchrotron lifetime of particles equals SNR age - radial spectral variation from burn-off of high energy particles

• Pulsar wind is confined by pressure in nebula - wind termination shock

Slane et al. 2004

bPulsar

WindMHD Shock

Particle Flow

logarithmicradial scale wR

} ++ + + +

R

F

˙ E = ˙ E 0 1+t

τ 0

⎣ ⎢

⎦ ⎥

−n+1

n−1

Rw =˙ E

4πcPN

⎣ ⎢

⎦ ⎥

1/2

br ≈ 1021BμG−3 t3

-2 Hz

Page 4: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Broadband Emission from PWNe• Spin-down power is injected into the PWN at a time-dependent rate

• Based on studies of Crab Nebula, there appear to be two populations – relic radio-emitting electrons and electrons injected in wind (Atoyan & Aharonian 1996)

• Get associated synchrotron and IC emission from electron population, and some assumed B field (e.g. Venter & dE Jager 2006)

Zhang et al. 2008

Page 5: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Broadband Emission from PWNeDel Zanna et al. 2006

Volpi et al. 2008

• More realistically, assume wind injected at termination shock, with radial particle distribution and latitude-dependent magnetic component:

• Evolve nebula considering radiative and adiabatic losses to obtain time- and spatially-dependent electron spectrum and B field (e.g. Volpi et al. 2008) - integrate over synchrotron and IC emissivity to get spectrum

= B2

4πργ 2c2 =σ (θ )

Page 6: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Connecting the Synchrotron and IC Emission

εkeVs ≈ 2 ×10−4 ETeV

2 B−5

εTeVic ≈ 3×10−3 ETeV

2

εkeVs ≈ 0.06ε TeV

ic B−5

fic(ε ic )fs (ε s )

=UB

UCMB

≈ 0.1B−5−2

• Energetic electrons in PWNe produce both synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission - for electrons with energy ETeV,

synchrotron

inverse-Compton

- comparing photon energies from given electron population gives B (e.g. Atoyan & Aharonian 1999)

• Similarly, relative fluxes fE = E2 f(E) = S give B:

• For low B, synchrotron lifetime is long, and fic/fs is large - can expect bright TeV emission from collection of long-lived electrons

Page 7: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

A Point About Injection: 3C 58

Slane et al. 2004

• 3C 58 is a bright, young PWN - morphology similar to radio/x-ray; suggests low magnetic field - low-frequency spectral break suggests possible injection break

• PWN and torus region observed in Spitzer/IRAC and CFHT observations - jet structure not seen above diffuse emission

Page 8: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

A Point About Injection: 3C 58• 3C 58 is a bright, young PWN - morphology similar to radio/x-ray; suggests low magnetic field - low-frequency spectral break suggests possible injection break

• PWN and torus region observed in Spitzer/IRAC and CFHT observations - jet structure not seen above diffuse emission

E

Flu

x D

ensi

ty

Injection

Nebula

SynchrotronBreak

Page 9: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Spitzer Observations of 3C 58VLA

IRAC 3.6mChandra

Bietenholz 2006

IRAC 4.5m

Slane et al. 2004 Slane et al. 2008

• 3C 58 is a bright, young PWN - morphology similar to radio/x-ray; suggests low magnetic field - low-frequency spectral break suggests possible injection break

• PWN and torus region observed in Spitzer/IRAC and CFHT observations - jet structure not seen above diffuse emission

Page 10: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Spitzer Observations of 3C 58• 3C 58 is a bright, young PWN - morphology similar to radio/x-ray; suggests low magnetic field - low-frequency spectral break suggests possible injection break

• PWN and torus region observed in Spitzer/IRAC and CFHT observations - jet structure not seen above diffuse emission

• IR flux for entire nebula falls within extrapolation of x-ray spectrum - indicates single break just below IR - sub-mm observations would be of interest • Torus spectrum requires change in slope between IR and x-ray bands - challenges assumptions of single power law for injection into nebula; TeV observations should provide constraints

Slane et al. 2008

Slane et al. 2008

Page 11: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Spitzer Observations of 3C 58

PRELIMINARY

• 3C 58 is a bright, young PWN - morphology similar to radio/x-ray; suggests low magnetic field - low-frequency spectral break suggests possible injection break

• PWN and torus region observed in Spitzer/IRAC and CFHT observations - jet structure not seen above diffuse emission

• IR flux for entire nebula falls within extrapolation of x-ray spectrum - indicates single break just below IR - sub-mm observations would be of interest • Torus spectrum requires change in slope between IR and x-ray bands - challenges assumptions of single power law for injection into nebula; TeV observations should provide constraints

Page 12: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Kes 75

• Bright wind nebula powered by PSR J1846-0258 (Edot = 1036.9) - jet-like structure defines rotation axis (Helfand et al. 2003)

• Deep Chandra observation reveals moving clumps, arc-like structure, Crab-like bays, inner/outer jet features, and abrupt jet termination in south (Ng et al. 2008) - best-fit structure to ordered structure yields jet/torus with clump in north - jet spectrum is harder than surrounding regions, suggesting high-velocity flow

Ng et al. 2008

Page 13: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Kes 75

See also poster E11.62: (S. Safi-Harb et al.)

• Spectral index shows general steepening with radius in diffuse nebula • HESS observations reveal VHE -ray emission - Lx/L B ~ 15 G , consistent w/ large X-ray size

• RXTE observations reveal magnetar-like bursts from PSR J1846-0258 (Gavril et al. 2008) - Chandra observation reveal brightening of pulsar as well - also see brightening of northern clump and inner jet (though unrelated to bursts given flow timescales)

Ng et al. 2008

Djannati-Atai et al. 2008

Page 14: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

HESS J1640-465

5 arcmin

Lemiere et al. 2008

• Extended source identified in HESS GPS - no known pulsar associated with source - may be associated with SNR G338.3-0.0

• XMM observations (Funk et al. 2007) identify extended X-ray emission, securing an associated X-ray PWN

• Chandra observations (Lemiere et al. 2008) reveal point source within extended nebula, apparently identifying associated neutron star - HI absorption indicates a distance d ~ 8 – 13 kpc - Lx ~ 1033.1 erg s-1 Edot ~ 1036.7 erg s-1

- X-ray and TeV spectrum well-described by leptonic model with B ~ 6 G and t ~ 15 kyr

Page 15: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

PWNe and Their SNRs

ISM

Sh

ock

ed ISM

Sh

ock

ed E

ject

a

Unsh

ock

ed

Eje

cta

PW

N

Puls

ar

Win

dForward Shock

Reverse ShockPWN Shock

PulsarTerminationShock

• Pulsar Wind - sweeps up ejecta; shock decelerates flow, accelerates particles; PWN forms

• Supernova Remnant - sweeps up ISM; reverse shock heats ejecta; ultimately compresses PWN; particles accelerated at forward shock generate magnetic turbulence; other particles scatter off this and receive additional acceleration

Gaensler & Slane 2006

Page 16: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

• Vela X is the PWN produced by the Vela pulsar - located primarily south of pulsar - apparently the result of relic PWN being disturbed by asymmetric passage of the SNR reverse shock (e.g. Blondin et al. 2001)

• Elongated “cocoon-like” hard X-ray structure extends southward of pulsar - clearly identified by HESS as an extended VHE structure - this is not the pulsar jet (which is known to be directed to NW); presumably the result of reverse shock interaction

Vela X

van der Swaluw, Downes, & Keegan 2003

t = 10,000 yr t = 20,000 yr t = 30,000 yr t = 56,000 yr

Blondin et al. 2001

RS interaction displaces PWN, produces turbulent structures, and mixes in ejecta

Page 17: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Vela X

LaMassa et al. 2008

• XMM spectrum shows nonthermal and ejecta-rich thermal emission from end of cocoon - reverse-shock crushed PWN and mixed-in ejecta?

• Radio, X-ray, and -ray measurements appear consistent with synchrotron and I-C emission from power law particle spectrum w/ two spectral breaks - density derived from thermal emission 10x lower than needed for pion-production to provide observed -ray flux - much larger X-ray coverage of Vela X is required to fully understand structure

Page 18: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Vela X

de Jager et al. 2008

• Radio and VHE spectrum for entire PWN suggests presence of two distinct electron populations - radio-emitting particles may be relic population; higher energy electrons injected by pulsar

• Maximum energy of radio-emitting electrons not well-constrained - this population will generate IC emission in GLAST band; spectral features will identify indentify emission from distinct up-scattered photon populations - upcoming observations will provide strong constraints on this electron population

Page 19: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

G327.1-1.1: Another Reverse-Shock InteractionTemim et al. 2008 • G327.1-1.1 is a composite SNR

with a bright central nebula - nebula is offset from SNR center - “finger” of emission extends toward northwest

• X-ray observations reveal compact source at tip of radio finger - trail of emission extends into nebula - Lx suggests Edot ~ 1037.3 erg s-1

See poster E11.57: Chandra and XMM Observations of the Composite SNR G327.1-1.1 (Tea Temim et al.)

Page 20: Pulsar Wind Nebulae

COSPAR 2008, Montreal, 18 July Patrick Slane (CfA)

Conclusions• PWNe are reservoirs of energetic particles injected from pulsar - morphology of nebulae reveals underlying geometry - synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission places strong constraints on the underlying particle spectrum and magnetic field

• Modeling of broadband emission constrains evolution of particles and B field - modeling form of injection spectrum and full evolution of particles still in its infancy

• Reverse-shock interactions between SNR and PWNe distort nebula and may explain TeV sources offset from pulsars - multiwavelength observations needed to secure this scenario (e.g. Vela X. HESS J1825-137, and others)

• Low-field, old PWNe may fade from X-ray view, but still be detectable sources of TeV emission - VHE -ray surveys are likely to continue uncovering new members of this class


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