Spectral evolution and polarization of variable structures in the pulsar wind nebula of PSR B0540-69.3
N. Lundqvist, P. Lundqvist, C.-I. Bj\"ornsson, G. Olofsson, S. Pires,, Yu. A. Shibanov, D. A. Zyuzin

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution optical and X-ray observations to analyze the dynamic structures and polarization in the pulsar wind nebula of PSR B0540-69.3, revealing local energy depositions, spectral steepening, and implications for the nebula's energy injection and supernova progenitor.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution polarization and spectral data of the PWN, revealing local energy depositions and detailed spectral analysis linking optical and X-ray emissions.
Findings
Identification of a fading 'blob' indicating local energy deposition.
Spatial polarization variations suggest recent local energy processes.
X-ray spectrum steepening implies energy injection axis and supernova progenitor characteristics.
Abstract
We present high spatial resolution optical imaging and polarization observations of the PSR B0540-69.3 and its highly dynamical pulsar wind nebula (PWN) performed with HST, and compare them with X-ray data obtained with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We have studied the bright region southwest of the pulsar where a bright "blob" is seen in 1999. We show that it may be a result of local energy deposition around 1999, and that the emission from this then faded away. Polarization data from 2007 show that the polarization properties show dramatic spatial variations at the 1999 blob position arguing for a local process. Several other positions along the pulsar-"blob" orientation show similar changes in polarization, indicating previous recent local energy depositions. In X-rays, the spectrum steepens away from the "blob" position, faster orthogonal to the pulsar-"blob" direction than along…
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