Three-dimensional Analytical Description of Magnetised Winds from Oblique Pulsars
Alexander Tchekhovskoy (1), Alexander Philippov (2), Anatoly, Spitkovsky (2) ((1) Berkeley, (2) Princeton)

TL;DR
This paper develops a 3D analytical model of pulsar winds that explains the increased luminosity of oblique pulsars by non-uniform open magnetic flux and current sheet dynamics, aiding understanding of pulsar emissions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel 3D analytical framework for pulsar winds that accounts for obliquity effects and magnetospheric current sheet behavior, advancing previous simplified models.
Findings
Oblique pulsars have more powerful winds due to non-uniform open magnetic flux.
Magnetospheric current sheets separate mildly relativistic plasma flows.
Magnetic field discontinuity across the current sheet decreases with obliquity.
Abstract
Rotating neutron stars, or pulsars, are plausibly the source of power behind many astrophysical systems, such as gamma-ray bursts, supernovae, pulsar wind nebulae and supernova remnants. In the past several years, 3D numerical simulations made it possible to compute pulsar spindown luminosity from first principles and revealed that oblique pulsar winds are more powerful than aligned ones. However, what causes this enhanced power output of oblique pulsars is not understood. In this work, using time-dependent 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) and force-free simulations, we show that, contrary to the standard paradigm, the open magnetic flux, which carries the energy away from the pulsar, is laterally non-uniform. We argue that this non-uniformity is the primary reason for the increased luminosity of oblique pulsars. To demonstrate this, we construct simple analytic descriptions of aligned and…
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