Discovery of a Young, Energetic 70.5 ms Pulsar Associated with the TeV Gamma-ray Source HESS J1837-069
E. V. Gotthelf, J. P. Halpern (Columbia University)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a young, energetic pulsar PSR J1838-0655 associated with a TeV gamma-ray source, providing insights into its properties, emission efficiency, and potential origin from a nearby star cluster.
Contribution
The discovery of PSR J1838-0655 and detailed multi-wavelength analysis of its emission and association with TeV gamma-ray source HESS J1837-069 is novel.
Findings
Pulsar period of 70.5 ms and characteristic age of 23 kyr.
The pulsar's spin-down luminosity and emission efficiencies across X-ray and gamma-ray bands.
Spatial association with TeV source HESS J1837-069 and possible origin from star cluster RSGC1.
Abstract
We report the discovery of 70.5 ms pulsations from the X-ray source AX J1838.0-0655 using the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). PSR J1838-0655 is a rotation-powered pulsar with spin-down luminosity Edot = 5.5e36 ergs/s, characteristic age tau = P/2Pdot = 23 kyr, and surface dipole magnetic field strength Bs = 1.9e12 G. It coincides with an unresolved INTEGRAL source and the extended TeV source HESS J1837-069. At an assumed distance of 6.6 kpc by association with an adjacent massive star cluster, the efficiency of PSR J1838-0655 converting spin-down luminosity to radiation is 0.8% for the 2-10 keV ASCA flux, 9% for the 20-300 keV INTEGRAL flux and ~3% for the >200 GeV emission of HESS J1837-069, making it a plausible power source for the latter. A Chandra X-ray observation resolves AX J1838.0-0655 into a bright point source surrounded by a ~2' diameter, centrally peaked nebula. The…
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