Detection of X-ray Emission from the Very Old Pulsar J0108-1431
G. G. Pavlov, O. Kargaltsev, J. A. Wong, G. P. Garmire

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of X-ray emission from the very old pulsar PSR J0108-1431 using Chandra, revealing its spectral properties, X-ray efficiency, and proper motion, thus providing insights into the emission mechanisms of aged pulsars.
Contribution
First X-ray detection of PSR J0108-1431, characterizing its spectrum, luminosity, efficiency, and proper motion, advancing understanding of old pulsar emission.
Findings
X-ray point source detected near the pulsar position.
Pulsar's X-ray spectrum fits power-law and blackbody models.
Pulsar has higher X-ray efficiency than younger pulsars.
Abstract
PSR J0108-1431 is a nearby, 170 Myr old, very faint radio pulsar near the "pulsar death line" in the P-Pdot diagram. We observed the pulsar field with the Chandra X-ray Observatory and detected a point source (53 counts in a 30 ks exposure, energy flux (9+/-2)\times 10^{-15} ergs cm^{-2} s^{-1} in the 0.3-8 keV band) close to the radio pulsar position. Based on the large X-ray/optical flux ratio at the X-ray source position, we conclude that the source is the X-ray counterpart of PSR J0108-1431.The pulsar spectrum can be described by a power-law model with photon index Gamma \approx 2.2 and luminosity L_{0.3-8 keV} \sim 2\times 10^{28} d_{130}^2 ergs s^{-1}, or by a blackbody model with the temperature kT\approx 0.28 keV and bolometric luminosity L_{bol} \sim 1.3\times 10^{28} d_{130}^2 ergs s^{-1}, for a plausible hydrogen column density NH = 7.3\times 10^{19} cm^{-2} (d_{130}=d/130…
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