Observations of Isolated Neutron Stars with the ESO Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics Demonstrator
R.P. Mignani (MSSL-UCL), R. Falomo, A. Moretti (INAF-OAPd), A. Treves, (University of Insubria), R. Turolla (University of Padova, MSSL-UCL), N., Sartore (University of Padova), S.Zane (MSSL-UCL), C. Arcidiacono, (INAF-OAPd), M. Lombini (INAF-OAB), J. Farinato, A. Baruffolo

TL;DR
This study used the VLT's adaptive optics to search for near-infrared counterparts of two XDINSs, finding none, and highlights the need for deeper observations to explore their possible evolutionary link to magnetars.
Contribution
First near-infrared observational attempt to identify counterparts of specific XDINSs using advanced adaptive optics technology.
Findings
No NIR counterparts detected down to Ks ~20 and 21.5.
Highlights the necessity for deeper NIR observations.
Suggests potential evolutionary connection between XDINSs and magnetars.
Abstract
High-energy observations have unveiled peculiar classes of isolated neutron stars which, at variance with radio pulsars, are mostly radio silent and not powered by the star rotation. Among these objects are the magnetars, hyper-magnetized neutron stars characterized by transient X-ray/gamma-ray emission, and neutron stars with purely thermal, and in most cases stationary, X-ray emission (a.k.a., X-ray dim isolated neutron stars or XDINSs). While apparently dissimilar in their high-energy behavior and age, both magnetars and XDINSs have similar periods and unusually high magnetic fields. This suggests a tantalizing scenario where the former evolve into the latter.Discovering so far uninvestigated similarities between the multi-wavelength properties of these two classes would be a further step forward to establish an evolutionary scenario. A most promising channels is the near infrared…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Sensor Technology · Seismic Waves and Analysis
