The first ultraviolet detection of the Large Magellanic Cloud pulsar PSR B0540-69 and its multi-wavelength properties
R. P. Mignani, A. Shearer, A. de Luca, F. E. Marshall, L. Guillemot,, D. A. Smith, B. Rudak, L. Zampieri, C. Barbieri, G. Naletto, C. Gouiffes, G., Kanbach

TL;DR
This study reports the first ultraviolet detection of the pulsar PSR B0540-69 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing its non-thermal emission, multi-wavelength pulsations, and similar beaming geometry to the Crab pulsar.
Contribution
It provides the first near-UV and FUV observations of PSR B0540-69, characterizing its spectrum, morphology, and pulsation properties across multiple wavelengths, and compares these with other known pulsars.
Findings
Detected pulsar in NUV and FUV bands with specific magnitudes.
Observed a steep non-thermal UV spectrum with spectral index ~3.
Found phase-aligned pulsations across radio, optical, UV, X-ray, and gamma-ray bands.
Abstract
We observed the young ( yrs) pulsar PSR B0540-69 in the near-ultraviolet (UV) for the first time with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) aboard the {\em Hubble Space Telescope}. Imaging observations with the NUV- and FUV-MAMA detectors in TIME-TAG mode allowed us to clearly detect the pulsar in two bands around 2350\AA\ and 1590\AA, with magnitudes and . We also detected the pulsar-wind nebula (PWN) in the NUV-MAMA image, with a morphology similar to that observed in the optical and near-infrared (IR). The extinction-corrected NUV and FUV pulsar fluxes are compatible with a very steep power law spectrum with spectral index , non compatible with a Rayleigh Jeans spectrum, indicating a non-thermal origin of the emission. The comparison with the…
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