The wind nebula around magnetar Swift J1834.9-0846
G. Younes, C. Kouveliotou, O. Kargaltsev, R. Gill, J. Granot, A. L., Watts, J. Gelfand, M. G. Baring, A. Harding, G. G. Pavlov, A. J. van der, Horst, D. Huppenkothen, E. G\"o\u{g}\"u\c{s}, L. Lin, O. J. Roberts

TL;DR
This study presents the discovery and analysis of a wind nebula around the magnetar Swift J1834.9-0846, demonstrating that magnetars can also host nebulae similar to those around rotation-powered pulsars, with implications for neutron star classifications.
Contribution
The paper provides the first evidence of a wind nebula around a magnetar, expanding the understanding of neutron star environments beyond pulsars.
Findings
The nebula's flux remained constant over 9 years.
The nebula's spectrum is consistent with pulsar-wind nebulae.
Swift J1834.9-0846 is the first magnetar with a confirmed wind nebula.
Abstract
We report on the analysis of two deep XMM-Newton observations of the magnetar Swift J1834.9-0846 and its surrounding extended emission taken in March 2014 and October 2014, 2.5 and 3.1 years after the source went into outburst. The magnetar is only weakly detected in the first observation with an absorption corrected flux erg s cm, and a upper limit during the second observation of about erg s cm. This flux level is more than 3 orders of magnitude lower than the flux measured at the outburst onset on September 2011. The extended emission, centered at the magnetar position and elongated towards the south-west, is clearly seen in both observations; it is best fit by a highly absorbed power-law (PL), with a hydrogen column density of cm and PL photon index…
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