X-ray Observations of Parsec-Scale Tails behind Two Middle-Aged Pulsars
O. Kargaltsev, Z. Misanovic, G. G. Pavlov, J. A. Wong, and G. P., Garmire

TL;DR
This study presents detailed X-ray observations of long, parsec-scale tails behind two middle-aged pulsars, revealing insights into their flow dynamics, magnetic fields, and implications for pulsar origins and nebula efficiencies.
Contribution
It provides the first resolved X-ray images of such long tails behind these pulsars, analyzing their spectra, flow speeds, magnetic fields, and origin, which advances understanding of pulsar wind nebulae and pulsar evolution.
Findings
Tails extend up to 5.6' and 5' from the pulsars, corresponding to several parsecs.
Flow speeds in the tails exceed 5,000 km/s, indicating mildly relativistic motion.
X-ray efficiency correlates poorly with pulsar age or spin-down luminosity.
Abstract
Chandra and XMM-Newton resolved extremely long tails behind two middle-aged pulsars, J1509-5850 and J1740+1000. The tail of PSR J1509-5850 is discernible up to 5.6' from the pulsar (6.5 pc at a distance of 4 kpc), with a flux of 2*10^{-13} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2} in 0.5-8 keV. The tail spectrum fits an absorbed power-law (PL) model with the photon index of 2.3\pm0.2, corresponding to the 0.5-8 keV luminosity of 1*10^{33} ergs s^{-1}, for n_H= 2.1*10^{22} cm^{-2}. The tail of PSR J1740+1000 is firmly detected up to 5' (2 pc at a 1.4 kpc distance), with a flux of 6*10^{-14} ergs cm^{-2} s^{-1} in 0.4-10 keV. The PL fit yields photon index of 1.4-1.5 and n_H=1*10^{21} cm^{-2}. The large extent of the tails suggests that the bulk flow in the tails starts as mildly relativistic downstream of the termination shock, and then gradually decelerates. Within the observed extent of the J1509-5850 tail,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
