Possible optical counterpart of PSR J1357-6429
A. Danilenko, A. Kirichenko, R. E. Mennickent, G. Pavlov, Yu., Shibanov, S. Zharikov, D. Zyuzin

TL;DR
Deep optical observations of PSR J1357-6429 suggest a candidate counterpart with unusual spectral properties, indicating a potentially high-velocity pulsar with a possible optical jet, but the nature of the source remains uncertain.
Contribution
First optical detection of PSR J1357-6429 candidate counterpart, revealing its spectral characteristics and possible high proper motion, advancing understanding of pulsar optical emissions and velocities.
Findings
Candidate optical counterpart within X-ray error circle.
Estimated pulsar velocity between 1600-2000 km/s.
Unusual steep spectral increase towards infrared.
Abstract
(Abridged) PSR J1357-6429 is a Vela-like radio pulsar that has been recently detected in X-rays and gamma-rays. It powers a compact tail-like X-ray pulsar wind nebula and X-ray-radio plerion associated with an extended TeV source HESS J1356-645. We present our deep optical observations with the Very Large Telescope to search for an optical counterpart of the pulsar and its nebula. We detect a point-like source in V, R, and I bands whose position is within the 1-sigma error circle of the X-ray position of the pulsar, and whose colours are distinct from those of ordinary stars. We consider it as a candidate optical counterpart of the pulsar. If it is indeed the counterpart, its 5-sigma offset from the radio pulsar position, measured about 9 yr earlier, implies that the transverse velocity of the pulsar is in the range of 1600--2000 km s^{-1} at the distance of 2--2.5 kpc, making it the…
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