Chandra observation of the relativistic binary J1906+0746
O. Kargaltsev, G. G. Pavlov

TL;DR
This study used Chandra X-ray observations to set the lowest known luminosity limits for pulsar J1906+0746 and tentatively detected an extended structure possibly related to a pulsar-wind nebula.
Contribution
First X-ray upper limits established for PSR J1906+0746, revealing an extremely underluminous pulsar and identifying a puzzling extended structure with potential nebula implications.
Findings
No X-ray photons detected from the pulsar, setting strict luminosity upper limits.
Detected a tilted ring-like structure possibly indicating a pulsar-wind nebula.
The pulsar's X-ray luminosity is among the lowest for similar spin-down pulsars.
Abstract
PSR J1906+0746 is a 112-kyr-old radio pulsar in a tight relativistic binary with a compact high-mass companion, at the distance of about 5 kpc. We observed this unique system with the Chandra ACIS detector for 31.6 ks. Surprisingly, not a single photon was detected within the 3" radius from the J1906+0746 radio position. For a plausible range of hydrogen column densities, n_H=(0.5-1)\times10^{22} cm^{-2}, the nondetection corresponds to the 90% upper limit of (3-5)\times10^{30} erg s^{-1} on the unabsorbed 0.5-8 keV luminosity for the power-law model with Gamma=1.0-2.0, and ~10^{32} erg s^{-1} on the bolometric luminosity of the thermal emission from the NS surface. The inferred limits are the lowest known for pulsars with spin-down properties similar to those of PSR J1906+0746. We have also tentatively detected a puzzling extended structure which looks like a tilted ring with a radius…
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