PSR J1907+0602: A Radio-Faint Gamma-Ray Pulsar Powering a Bright TeV Pulsar Wind Nebula
Fermi LAT Collaboration, the Fermi Pulsar Timing Consortium: A. A., Abdo, et al

TL;DR
This study characterizes the gamma-ray pulsar PSR J1907+0602, revealing its faint radio emission, association with a TeV pulsar wind nebula, and multiwavelength properties, providing insights into its distance, emission mechanisms, and environment.
Contribution
First multiwavelength analysis of PSR J1907+0602 establishing its association with a TeV nebula and providing detailed emission and distance measurements.
Findings
Pulsar is within the TeV source extent, confirming association.
Detected faint radio pulsations with a dispersion measure indicating a 3.2 kpc distance.
Identified a compact X-ray source with non-thermal emission.
Abstract
We present multiwavelength studies of the 106.6 ms gamma-ray pulsar PSR J1907+06 near the TeV source MGRO J1908+06. Timing observations with Fermi result in a precise position determination for the pulsar of R.A. = 19h07m547(2), decl. = +06:02:16(2) placing the pulsar firmly within the TeV source extent, suggesting the TeV source is the pulsar wind nebula of PSR J1907+0602. Pulsed gamma-ray emission is clearly visible at energies from 100 MeV to above 10 GeV. The phase-averaged power-law index in the energy range E > 0.1 GeV is = 1.76 \pm 0.05 with an exponential cutoff energy E_{c} = 3.6 \pm 0.5 GeV. We present the energy-dependent gamma-ray pulsed light curve as well as limits on off-pulse emission associated with the TeV source. We also report the detection of very faint (flux density of ~3.4 microJy) radio pulsations with the Arecibo telescope at 1.5 GHz having a dispersion measure…
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