Gamma-ray emission from PSR J0007+7303 using 7 years of Fermi Large Area Telescope observations
Jian Li, Diego F. Torres, Emma de Ona Wilhelmi, Nanda Rea, Jonatan, Martin

TL;DR
This study analyzes over seven years of Fermi LAT data to characterize gamma-ray emission from PSR J0007+7303, revealing spectral features, detecting glitches, and discovering a new nearby gamma-ray source, with implications for pulsar magnetospheres.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral analysis of PSR J0007+7303 during off-peak phases and reports the discovery of a new gamma-ray source near the pulsar.
Findings
Detection of PSR J0007+7303 during off-peak phases with TS=262
Preference for a power law with exponential cutoff at 2.7 GeV
Discovery of a new gamma-ray source, Fermi J0020+7328
Abstract
Based on more than seven years of Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) Pass 8 data, we report on a detailed analysis of the bright gamma-ray pulsar (PSR) J0007+7303. We confirm that PSR J0007+7303 is significantly detected as a point source also during the off-peak phases with a TS value of 262 ( 16 ). In the description of PSR J0007+7303 off-peak spectrum, a power law with an exponential cutoff at 2.71.21.3 GeV (the first/second uncertainties correspond to statistical/systematic errors) is preferred over a single power law at a level of 3.5 . The possible existence of a cutoff hints at a magnetospheric origin of the emission. In addition, no extended gamma-ray emission is detected compatible with either the supernova remnant (CTA 1) or the very high energy (> 100 GeV) pulsar wind nebula. A flux upper limit of 6.510 erg cm s in…
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