VLT observations of the two Fermi pulsars PSR J1357-6429 and PSR J1048-5832
R. P. Mignani, A. Shearer, A. De Luca, P. Moran, S. Collins, M., Marelli

TL;DR
This study used VLT optical observations to search for emission from two Fermi pulsars, providing constraints on their optical luminosity and potential proper motion, thereby enhancing understanding of neutron star properties.
Contribution
First optical constraints on PSR J1357-6429 and PSR J1048-5832 using VLT data, including a tentative proper motion estimate for PSR J1357-6429.
Findings
No optical counterparts detected down to V~27 and ~27.6.
Possible faint object near PSR J1357-6429's position.
Optical efficiency limits comparable to Vela pulsar.
Abstract
Optical observations of pulsars are crucial to study the neutron star properties, from the structure and composition of the interior, to the properties and geometry of the magnetosphere. Historically, X and gamma-ray observations have paved the way to the pulsar optical identifications. The launch of Fermi opened new perspectives in the optical-to-gamma-ray studies of neutron stars, with the detection of more than 80 pulsars. Here, we aim to search for optical emission from two Fermi pulsars which are interesting targets on the basis of their spin-down age, energetics, and distance: PSR J1357-6429and PSR J1048-5832. The two pulsars and their pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) are also detected in X-rays by Chandra and XMM. No deep optical observations of these two pulsars have been reported so far. We used multi-band optical images (V,R,I) taken with the VLT and available in the European…
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