Observations of one young and three middle-aged $\gamma$-ray pulsars with the Gran Telescopio Canarias
R. P. Mignani (INAF/IASF - Milan, Janusz Gil Institute of Astronomy),, V. Testa (INAF/OAR), N. Rea (ICE, CSIC, Anton Pannekoek Institute for, Astronomy, IEEC), M. Marelli, D. Salvetti (INAF/IASF Milan), D. Torres (ICE,, CSIC, IEEC, ICREA), E. de Ona Wilhelmi (ICE, CSIC, IEEC)

TL;DR
This study used the Gran Telescopio Canarias to search for optical counterparts of four gamma-ray pulsars, providing new brightness limits and insights into their optical emission properties and spectral behaviors.
Contribution
First optical brightness limits for two middle-aged gamma-ray pulsars using a large telescope, constraining their optical emission and spectral characteristics.
Findings
No viable optical counterparts found for three pulsars.
Brightness limits set at g' ≈ 27 for two pulsars.
Constraints on spectral turnovers at low energies.
Abstract
We used the 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias to search for the optical counterparts to four isolated -ray pulsars, all detected in the X-rays by either \xmm\ or \chan\ but not yet in the optical. Three of them are middle-aged pulsars -- PSR\, J1846+0919 (0.36 Myr), PSR\, J2055+2539 (1.2 Myr), PSR\, J2043+2740 (1.2 Myr) -- and one, PSR\, J1907+0602, is a young pulsar (19.5 kyr). For both PSR\, J1907+0602 and PSR\, J2055+2539 we found one object close to the pulsar position. However, in both cases such an object cannot be a viable candidate counterpart to the pulsar. For PSR\, J1907+0602, because it would imply an anomalously red spectrum for the pulsar and for PSR\, J2055+2539 because the pulsar would be unrealistically bright () for the assumed distance and interstellar extinction. For PSR\, J1846+0919, we found no object sufficiently close to the expected…
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