Observations of three young gamma-ray pulsars with the Gran Telescopio Canarias
R. P. Mignani (INAF-IASF, Milan, Janusz Gil Institute of Astronomy),, N. Rea (Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy, ICE, CSIC-IEEC), V. Testa, (INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma), M. Marelli (INAF/IASF, Milan), A., De Luca (INAF/IASF, Milan, INFN, Pavia)

TL;DR
This study used the Gran Telescopio Canarias to perform deep optical observations of three young gamma-ray pulsars, setting upper limits on their optical and X-ray emissions and comparing their multi-wavelength properties with similar pulsars.
Contribution
First deep optical observations of three gamma-ray pulsars with GTC, providing upper limits on optical and X-ray emissions and enhancing multi-wavelength understanding.
Findings
No optical counterparts detected down to magnitude limits around 27.
Optical upper limits constrain pulsar luminosities and spectral extrapolations.
No X-ray detection for PSR J0248+6021 with Chandra.
Abstract
We report the analysis of the first deep optical observations of three isolated -ray pulsars detected by the {\em Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope}: the radio-loud PSR\, J0248+6021 and PSR\, J0631+1036, and the radio-quiet PSR\, J0633+0632. The latter has also been detected in the X rays. The pulsars are very similar in their spin-down age (40--60 kyrs), spin-down energy ( erg s), and dipolar surface magnetic field (-- G). These pulsars are promising targets for multi-wavelength observations, since they have been already detected in rays and in radio or X-rays. None of them has been detected yet in the optical band. We observed the three pulsar fields in 2014 with the Spanish 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC). We could not find any candidate optical counterpart to the three pulsars close to their most…
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