Chandra Observations of Outflows from PSR J1509-5850
Noel Klingler, Oleg Kargaltsev, Blagoy Rangelov, George G. Pavlov,, Bettina Posselt, and C.-Y. Ng

TL;DR
Deep Chandra observations of PSR J1509-5850 reveal complex bipolar outflows and detailed nebula structure, providing insights into pulsar wind dynamics and particle acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
This study presents the first detection of a northern outflow and detailed morphology of the PWN, enhancing understanding of pulsar wind interactions with the environment.
Findings
Detection of a northern outflow extending 7' from the pulsar
No spectral softening observed in the southern outflow, indicating high flow speeds
Possible particle leakage into the ISM from the northern outflow
Abstract
PSR J1509-5850 is a middle-aged pulsar with the period P ~ 89 ms, spin-down power Edot = 5.1 x 10^35 erg/s, at a distance of about 3.8 kpc. We report on deep Chandra X-ray Observatory observations of this pulsar and its pulsar wind nebula (PWN). In addition to the previously detected tail extending up to 7' southwest from the pulsar (the southern outflow), the deep images reveal a similarly long, faint diffuse emission stretched toward the north (the northern outflow) and the fine structure of the compact nebula (CN) in the pulsar vicinity. The CN is resolved into two lateral tails and one axial tail pointing southwest (a morphology remarkably similar to that of the Geminga PWN), which supports the assumption that the pulsar moves towards the northeast. The luminosities of the southern and northern outflows are about 1 x 10^33 and 4 x 10^32 erg/s, respectively. The spectra extracted…
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