The brightening of the pulsar wind nebula of PSR B0540--69 after its spin-down rate transition
M. Y. Ge, F. J. Lu, L. L. Yan, S. S. Weng, S. N. Zhang, Q. D. Wang, L., J. Wang, Z. J. Li, W. Zhang

TL;DR
This study observes a gradual brightening of the pulsar wind nebula around PSR B0540--69 following a sudden spin-down rate change, indicating a magnetospheric event that increases wind power and X-ray emission.
Contribution
It provides the first time-resolved evidence linking a spin-down rate transition to increased PWN brightness, revealing new insights into pulsar wind dynamics.
Findings
PWN brightness increased by 32% after the SRT
No change detected in pulsed X-ray emission
Estimated particle lifetime in PWN is approximately 397 days
Abstract
It is believed that an isolated pulsar loses its rotational energy mainly through a relativistic wind consisting of electrons, positrons and possibly Poynting flux\cite{Pacini1973,Rees1974,Kennel1984}. As it expands, this wind may eventually be terminated by a shock, where particles can be accelerated to energies of X-ray synchrotron emission, and a pulsar wind nebula (PWN) is usually detectable surrounding a young energetic pulsar\cite{Pacini1973,Rees1974,Kennel1984}. However, the nature and/or energetics of these physical processes remain very uncertain, largely because they typically cannot be studied in a time-resolved fashion. Here we show that the X-ray PWN around the young pulsar PSR B0540--69 brightens gradually up to 32 over the mean previous flux, after a sudden spin-down rate () transition (SRT) by \ in December 2011, which has very different…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
