Are pulsar halos rare ?
Pierrick Martin, Alexandre Marcowith, and Luigi Tibaldo

TL;DR
This study investigates the frequency and physical characteristics of gamma-ray halos around middle-aged pulsars, analyzing diffusion suppression and its implications for local positron flux, suggesting halos may be rarer than previously thought.
Contribution
The paper explores minimal diffusion suppression scenarios for pulsar halos and assesses their impact on local positron flux, challenging the assumption that all middle-aged pulsars develop halos.
Findings
Strong diffusion suppression (2-3 orders of magnitude) is needed to explain observations.
Possible halos with diffusion suppression as small as 30pc exist around some pulsars.
Most middle-aged pulsars may not develop detectable halos, simplifying models of positron sources.
Abstract
Extended gamma-ray emission, interpreted as halos formed by the inverse-Compton scattering of ambient photons by electron-positron pairs, is observed toward a number of middle-aged pulsars. The physical origin and actual commonness of the phenomenon in the Galaxy remain unclear. The conditions of pair confinement seem extreme compared to what can be achieved in recent theoretical models. We searched for scenarios minimizing as much as possible the extent and magnitude of diffusion suppression in the halos in J0633+1746 and B0656+14, and explored the implications on the local positron flux if they are applied to all nearby middle-aged pulsars. We used a phenomenological static two-zone diffusion framework and compared its predictions with Fermi-LAT and HAWC observations of the two halos, and with the local positron flux measured with AMS-02. While strong diffusion suppression by 2-3…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
