Geminga's puzzling pulsar wind nebula
B. Posselt, G. G. Pavlov, P. O. Slane, R. Romani, N. Bucciantini, A., M. Bykov, O. Kargaltsev, M. C. Weisskopf, C.-Y. Ng

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed X-ray observations of the Geminga pulsar wind nebula, revealing complex structures and spectra that challenge existing models, and discusses multiple scenarios for its morphology and emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution Chandra observations of Geminga's PWN, analyzing its morphology, spectra, and variability to explore different physical models.
Findings
Lateral tails are significantly harder in spectrum than the pulsar and axial tail.
No significant diffuse X-ray emission between the lateral tails.
Time-variable blobs in the axial tail show no evidence of constant outward motion.
Abstract
We report on six new Chandra observations of the Geminga pulsar wind nebula (PWN). The PWN consists of three distinct elongated structures - two pc long lateral tails and a segmented axial tail of pc length, where . The photon indices of the power law spectra of the lateral tails, , are significantly harder than those of the pulsar () and the axial tail (). There is no significant diffuse X-ray emission between the lateral tails -- the ratio of the X-ray surface brightness between the south tail and this sky area is at least 12. The lateral tails apparently connect directly to the pulsar and show indication of moving footpoints. The axial tail comprises time-variable emission blobs. However, there is no evidence for constant or decelerated outward motion of…
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