Optical-uv spectrum and proper motion of the middle-aged pulsar b1055-52
R. P. Mignani (Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University College, London), G. G. Pavlov (Department of Astronomy, Astrophysics, Pennsylvania, State University), O. Kargaltsev (Department of Astronomy, University of, Florida)

TL;DR
This study confirms the optical counterpart of pulsar B1055-52 using HST data, revealing a spectrum with a magnetospheric power-law and a thermal Rayleigh-Jeans component, and measures its proper motion and position.
Contribution
First HST multi-band observations confirming the optical counterpart and characterizing its spectrum and proper motion for pulsar B1055-52.
Findings
Optical counterpart identified with 0.15" accuracy.
Spectral index of the magnetospheric component is larger than other pulsars.
Thermal component suggests a closer, colder emission area.
Abstract
PSRB1055-52 is a middle-aged (~535 kyr) radio, X-ray, and gamma-ray pulsar showing X-ray thermal emission from the neutron star (NS) surface. A candidate optical counterpart to PSRB1055-52 was proposed by Mignani and coworkers based on Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations performed in 1996, in one spectral band only. We report on HST observations of this field carried out in 2008, in four spectral bands. The astrometric and photometric analyses of these data confirm the identification of the proposed candidate as the pulsar's optical counterpart. Similarly to other middle-aged pulsars, its optical-UV spectrum can be described by the sum of a power-law (PLO) component, presumably emitted from the pulsar magnetosphere, and a Rayleigh-Jeans (RJ) component emitted from the NS surface. The spectral index of the PLO component, alpha_O=1.05+/-0.34, is larger than for other pulsars with…
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