The X-ray Counterpart of the High-B Pulsar PSR J0726-2612
J. S. Speagle (1,2), D. L. Kaplan (1,3), and M. H. van Kerkwijk (4), ((1) University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, (2) Harvard College, (3), corresponding author, (4) University of Toronto)

TL;DR
This study confirms the X-ray counterpart of PSR J0726-2612, a young, strongly magnetized neutron star with thermal emission, bridging the gap between typical pulsars and isolated neutron stars, and suggesting a shared evolutionary path.
Contribution
The paper provides the first confirmed X-ray detection of PSR J0726-2612, demonstrating its thermal spectrum and linking it to isolated neutron stars, thus offering new insights into neutron star evolution.
Findings
PSR J0726-2612 has a purely thermal X-ray spectrum.
The pulsar's properties resemble those of INSs despite its shorter age.
Long-period, strong-field pulsars and INSs may belong to the same class.
Abstract
Middle-aged, cooling neutron stars are observed both as relatively rapidly spinning radio pulsars and as more slowly spinning, strongly magnetized isolated neutron stars (INSs), which stand out by their thermal X-ray spectra. The difference between the two classes may be that the INSs initially had much stronger magnetic fields, which decayed. To test this, we used the Chandra X-ray Observatory to observe 1RXS J072559.8-261229, a possible X-ray counterpart to PSR J0726-2612, which, with its 3.44s period and 3e13G inferred magnetic field strength, is the nearest and least extincted among the possible slowly-spinning, strong-field INS progenitors (it likely is in the Gould Belt, at ~1 kpc). We confirm the identification and find that the pulsar has a spectrum consistent with being purely thermal, with blackbody temperature kT=87+/-5 eV and radius R=5.7+2.6-1.3 km at a distance of 1 kpc.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
