Using Chandra to Unveil the High-Energy Properties of the High-Magnetic Field Radio Pulsar J1119-6127
Samar Safi-Harb, Harsha S. Kumar

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations to analyze the high-energy properties of the young, high-magnetic-field pulsar J1119-6127 and its pulsar wind nebula, revealing detailed spectral and morphological features.
Contribution
First independent imaging and spectroscopic analysis of the pulsar and PWN, identifying non-thermal emission and jet-like structures in high-magnetic-field pulsar J1119-6127.
Findings
PWN exhibits jet-like structures extending at least 7 arcseconds.
Pulsar's spectrum shows evidence of non-thermal magnetospheric emission.
Pulsar's X-ray efficiency is comparable to similar rotation-powered pulsars.
Abstract
(shortened) PSR J1119-6127 is a high magnetic field (B=4.1E13 Gauss), young (<=1,700 year-old), and slow (P=408 ms) radio pulsar associated with the supernova remnant (SNR) G292.2-0.5. In 2003, Chandra allowed the detection of the X-ray counterpart of the radio pulsar, and provided the first evidence for a compact pulsar wind nebula (PWN). We here present new Chandra observations which allowed for the first time an imaging and spectroscopic study of the pulsar and PWN independently of each other. The PWN is only evident in the hard band and consists of jet-like structures extending to at least 7" from the pulsar, with the southern `jet' being longer than the northern `jet'. The spectrum of the PWN is described by a power law with a photon index~1.1 for the compact PWN and ~1.4 for the southern long jet (at a fixed column density of 1.8E22/cm2), and a total luminosity of 4E32 ergs/s…
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