New X-ray observations of the Geminga pulsar wind nebula
G. G. Pavlov (Penn State), S. Bhattacharyya (TIFR, India), V. E., Zavlin (USRA/NASA MSFC)

TL;DR
This paper presents new high-resolution X-ray observations of the Geminga pulsar wind nebula, revealing detailed morphology, variability, and possible physical interpretations of its complex structure.
Contribution
It provides deeper Chandra and XMM-Newton imaging of the Geminga PWN, uncovering extended features, variability, and proposing models for the nebula's morphology and dynamics.
Findings
Axial tail extends at least 50" from the pulsar.
PWN luminosity is about 10 times lower than the pulsar's magnetospheric luminosity.
Evidence of variability and possible blob motion in the PWN.
Abstract
Previous observations of the middle-aged pulsar Geminga with XMM-Newton and Chandra have shown an unusual pulsar wind nebula (PWN), with a 20" long central (axial) tail directed opposite to the pulsar's proper motion and two 2' long, bent lateral (outer) tails. Here we report on a deeper (78 ks) Chandra observation and a few additional XMM-Newton observations of the Geminga PWN. The new Chandra observation has shown that the axial tail, which includes up to three brighter blobs, extends at least 50" (i.e., 0.06 d_{250} pc) from the pulsar. It also allowed us to image the patchy outer tails and the emission in the immediate vicinity of the pulsar with high resolution. The PWN luminosity, L_{0.3-8 keV} ~ 3\times 10^{29} d_{250}^2 erg/s, is lower than the pulsar's magnetospheric luminosity by a factor of 10. The spectra of the PWN elements are rather hard (photon index ~ 1). Comparing the…
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