The near-infrared detection of PSR B0540-69 and its nebula
R. P. MignanI (UCL/MSSL, Kepler Institute of Astronomy, University of, Zielona Gora), A. De Luca (INAF, IUSS, INFN), W. Hummel (ESO), A. Zajczyk, (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, LUPM), B. Rudak (Nicolaus, Copernicus Astronomical Center, KAA UMK), G.Kanbach (MPE)

TL;DR
This study reports the first near-infrared detection of PSR B0540-69 and its nebula, extending the understanding of its spectrum and morphology, and comparing it with optical data to explore emission mechanisms.
Contribution
First near-infrared detection of PSR B0540-69 and its PWN, providing new spectral measurements and morphological insights with high-resolution VLT observations.
Findings
Detected PSR B0540-69 in J, H, Ks bands for the first time
Measured the pulsar's spectral index as 0.70 +/- 0.04
Found the PWN spectrum to be slightly flatter with index 0.56 +/- 0.03
Abstract
The ~1700 year old PSR B0540-69 in the LMC is considered the twin of the Crab pulsar because of its similar spin parameters, magnetic field, and energetics. Its optical spectrum is fit by a power-law, ascribed to synchrotron radiation, like for the young Crab and Vela pulsars. nIR observations, never performed for PSR B0540-69, are crucial to determine whether the optical power-law spectrum extends to longer wavelengths or a new break occurs, like it happens for both the Crab and Vela pulsars in the mIR, hinting at an even more complex particle energy and density distribution in the pulsar magnetosphere. We observed PSR B0540-69 in the J, H, and Ks bands with the VLT to detect it, for the first time, in the nIR and characterise its optical-to-nIR spectrum. To disentangle the pulsar emission from that of its pulsar wind nebula (PWN), we obtained high-spatial resolution adaptive optics…
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