VLT/FORS2 observations of the optical counterpart of the isolated neutron star RBS 1774
R. P. Mignani (MSSL-UCL, Institute of Astronomy, University of Zielona, Gora), S. Zane (MSSL-UCL), R. Turolla (Department of Physics, University of, Padua), F. Haberl (Max Planck Institut fur Extraterrestrische Physik), M., Cropper (MSSL-UCL), C. Motch (CNRS

TL;DR
This study used VLT/FORS2 to observe the optical counterpart of the neutron star RBS 1774, setting upper limits on its optical flux and suggesting a thermal origin for its emission, which informs models of neutron star atmospheres.
Contribution
First deep optical R-band observations of RBS 1774 with VLT, constraining its optical flux and spectral properties, and providing insights into its thermal emission characteristics.
Findings
No optical counterpart detected down to R~27 magnitude.
Optical flux consistent with a thermal Rayleigh-Jeans spectrum.
Optical properties suggest a low-temperature thermal emission model.
Abstract
X-ray observations performed with ROSAT led to the discovery of a group (seven to date) of X-ray dim and radio-silent middle-aged isolated neutron stars (a.k.a. XDINSs), which are characterised by pure blackbody spectra (kT~40-100 eV), long X-ray pulsations (P=3-12 s), and appear to be endowed with relatively high magnetic fields, (B~10d13-14 G). RBS 1774 is one of the few XDINSs with a candidate optical counterpart, which we discovered with the VLT. We performed deep observations of RBS 1774 in the R band with the VLT to disentangle a non-thermal power-law spectrum from a Rayleigh-Jeans, whose contributions are expected to be very much different in the red part of the spectrum. We did not detect the RBS 1774 candidate counterpart down to a 3 sigma limiting magnitude of R~27. The constraint on its colour, (B-R)<0.6, rules out that it is a background object, positionally coincident with…
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