Radio streaks in the Lighthouse Nebula discovered with MeerKAT -- Particles escaping from the tail and illuminating the ambient magnetic field
Pierrick Martin, Mickael Coriat, Barbara Olmi, Elena Amato, Niccol\`o Bucciantini, Alexandre Marcowith, Sarah Recchia

TL;DR
This study uses MeerKAT radio observations to reveal structured synchrotron nebulae and streaks around the Lighthouse Nebula, providing insights into particle escape mechanisms and magnetic field interactions in pulsar wind nebulae.
Contribution
First detection of transverse radio streaks in the Lighthouse Nebula, illustrating particle escape processes and magnetic field illumination at parsec scales.
Findings
Detection of a highly structured nebula with a cometary tail
Observation of multiple transverse radio streaks
Most particles are discharged into the ambient medium within several parsecs
Abstract
Bow-shock pulsar wind nebulae are valuable sources to investigate the dynamics of relativistic pulsar winds and the mechanisms by which they are converted into cosmic-ray leptons at the highest energies. The Lighthouse Nebula is one such object, famous for the high velocity of its pulsar and a long misaligned X-ray jet that is understood as a specific escape channel for the most energetic particles. We aim to get a better understanding of how the bulk of non-thermal particles are released into the interstellar medium. We focus on GHz radio observations, which probe lower-energy particles that are dominant in number and long-lived, thus offering a picture of how escape proceeds in the long run. We analyze 10.5h of MeerKAT observations in the 0.9-1.7GHz band. MeerKAT observations reveal a highly structured synchrotron nebula downstream of pulsar PSR J1101-6101. A cometary tail is detected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
