The Vela and Geminga pulsars in the mid-infrared
Andrey A. Danilenko, Dmitry A. Zyuzin, Yuri A. Shibanov, Sergey V., Zharikov

TL;DR
This study confirms mid-infrared emission excesses in the Vela and Geminga pulsars using Spitzer data, suggesting unique emission features possibly linked to fallback discs or nebulae, contrasting with other pulsars like Crab.
Contribution
First mid-infrared detection and analysis of Vela and Geminga pulsars, confirming their infrared excesses and exploring potential origins.
Findings
Vela pulsar shows a significant infrared counterpart.
Geminga's infrared detection is marginal and needs confirmation.
Infrared excesses differ from the Crab pulsar, resembling magnetars.
Abstract
The Vela and Geminga pulsars are rotation powered neutron stars, which have been identified in various spectral domains, from the near-infrared to hard -rays. In the near-infrared they exhibit tentative emission excesses, as compared to the optical range. To check whether these features are real, we analysed archival mid-infrared broadband images obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope in the 3.6--160 m range and compared them with the data in other spectral domains. In the 3.6 and 5.8 m bands we detected at (4--5) significance level a point-like object, that is likely to be the counterpart of the Vela pulsar. Its position coincides with the pulsar at < 0.4 arcsec 1-accuracy level. Combining the measured fluxes with the available multiwavelength spectrum of the pulsar shows a steep flux increase towards the infrared, confirming the reality of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
