Simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of the radio-mode-switching pulsar PSR B1822-09
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| Publication date | 2017 |
| Journal | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |
| Volume | Issue number | 466 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 1688-1708 |
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| Abstract |
We report on simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of the
radio-mode-switching pulsar PSR B1822-09 with ESA's XMM-Newton and the
Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope, Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope
and Lovell radio telescopes. PSR B1822-09 switches between a
radio-bright and radio-quiet mode, and we discovered a relationship
between the durations of its modes and a known underlying
radio-modulation time-scale within the modes. We discovered X-ray
(energies 0.2-1.4 keV) pulsations with a broad sinusoidal pulse,
slightly lagging the radio main pulse in phase by 0.094 ± 0.017,
with an energy-dependent pulsed fraction varying from ∼0.15 at 0.3
keV to ∼0.6 at 1 keV. No evidence is found for simultaneous X-ray
and radio mode switching. The total X-ray spectrum consists of a cool
component (T ∼0.96 × 106 K, hotspot radius R
∼2.0 km) and a hot component (T ∼2.2 × 106 K, R
∼100 m). The hot component can be ascribed to the pulsed emission
and the cool component to the unpulsed emission. The high-energy
characteristics of PSR B1822-09 resemble those of middle-aged pulsars
such as PSR B0656+14, PSR B1055-52 and Geminga, including an indication
for pulsed high-energy gamma-ray emission in Fermi Large Area Telescope
data. Explanations for the high pulsed fraction seem to require
different temperatures at the two poles of this orthogonal rotator, or
magnetic anisotropic beaming effects in its strong magnetic field. In
our X-ray skymap, we found a harder source at only 5.1 ± 0.5
arcsec from PSR B1822-09, which might be a pulsar wind nebula.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw3135 |
| Other links | http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017MNRAS.466.1688H |
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