Discovery of gamma and X-ray pulsations from the young and energetic PSR J1357-6429 with Fermi and XMM-Newton
M. Lemoine-Goumard, V. E. Zavlin, M.-H. Grondin, R. Shannon, D. A., Smith, M. Burgay, F. Camilo, J. Cohen-Tanugi, P. C. C. Freire, J. E. Grove,, L. Guillemot, S. Johnston, M. Keith, M. Kramer, R. N. Manchester, P. F., Michelson, D. Parent, A. Possenti, P. S. Ray, M. Renaud

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of gamma-ray and X-ray pulsations from PSR J1357-6429, a young energetic pulsar, using Fermi-LAT and XMM-Newton data, providing insights into its emission properties and constraints on its pulsar wind nebula.
Contribution
First detection of gamma-ray and X-ray pulsations from PSR J1357-6429 with detailed spectral analysis and implications for pulsar emission models.
Findings
Gamma-ray spectrum fits a power-law with exponential cutoff at 0.8 GeV.
Gamma-ray luminosity is consistent with the sqrt(Edot) relationship.
Upper limits set on pulsar wind nebula emission.
Abstract
Since the launch of the Fermi satellite, the number of known gamma-ray pulsars has increased tenfold. Most gamma-ray detected pulsars are young and energetic, and many are associated with TeV sources. PSR J1357-6429 is a high spin-down power pulsar (Edot = 3.1 * 10^36 erg/s), discovered during the Parkes multibeam survey of the Galactic plane, with significant timing noise typical of very young pulsars. In the very-high-energy domain, H.E.S.S. has reported the detection of the extended source HESS J1356-645 (intrinsic Gaussian width of 12') whose centroid lies 7' from PSR J1357-6429. Using a rotational ephemeris obtained with 74 observations made with the Parkes telescope at 1.4 GHz, we phase-fold more than two years of gamma-ray data acquired by Fermi-LAT as well as those collected with XMM-Newton, and perform gamma-ray spectral modeling. Significant gamma and X-ray pulsations are…
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