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Pulsar Wind Nebulae with LOFAR

Pulsar Wind Nebulae with LOFAR. Jason Hessels (ASTRON/UvA). Astrophysics with E-LOFAR - Hamburg - Sept. 16 th -19 th , 2008. Outline Observing Pulsar Wind Nebulae (PWNe) with LOFAR. General theoretical model of PWNe Observational properties of PWNe Observing PWNe with LOFAR.

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Pulsar Wind Nebulae with LOFAR

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  1. Pulsar Wind Nebulae with LOFAR Jason Hessels (ASTRON/UvA) Astrophysics with E-LOFAR - Hamburg - Sept. 16th -19th, 2008

  2. OutlineObserving Pulsar Wind Nebulae (PWNe)with LOFAR • General theoretical model of PWNe • Observational properties of PWNe • Observing PWNe with LOFAR Astrophysics with E-LOFAR - Hamburg - Sept. 16th -19th, 2008

  3. Pulsar Wind Nebulae (PWNe): a.k.a. “Plerions” < 10% of “spin-down” energy converted into pulsations Majority is released as a pulsar wind The wind continuously injects high-energy electrons/positrons and magnetic field at the centre of an expanding supernova remnant producing a synchrotron nebula In general, PWNe are found around the youngest and/or most energetic pulsars, Wind persists beyond point where nebula is visible Not just young pulsars: also high Edot, or strong wind confinement (high-velocity pulsars) • ~ 50 PWNe known Chandra time-lapse view of Crab PWN

  4. Schematic PWN From Gaensler & Slane (2006) (young pulsar case) PWN: Synchrotron-emitting bubble of energetic particles at the center of an expanding supernova remnant Wind is not isotropic: equatorial and polar outflows Crab is in many ways the prototype Also bow-shock nebulae (high-velocity pulsars) and wind shocks in compact binaries

  5. Crab Nebula From Gaensler & Slane (2006) Observational Characteristics • Most PWNe only observed at cm radio and 1-10 keV X-rays • Decreasing size of nebula going from radio to X-rays • General radio properties: • - radio-emitting e-/e+ have very • long synchrotron lifetimes • - amorphous (not shell-like or torii) - filaments and other structures - high (>10%) fractional linear • polarization - flat, non-thermal, power-law • spectrum (alpha = 0.0-0.3) - need for spectral break between • radio and X-rays

  6. Astrophysics of PWNe • Pulsar birth properties (link to progenitor properties?) • Understanding the P-Pdot diagram (i.e. pulsar energetics and magnetic fields) • Relativistic flows/shocks (can resolve nebula) • Particle acceleration and interaction with ISM • Strong link with Galactic population of rare GeV and TeV sources

  7. PWN with LOFAR Detect SNR shells around known PWNe Roughly half of the ~50 known PWNe are “naked” e.g. the elusive Crab SNR shell (crab supernova blast wave hasn’t interacted with enough surrounding gas yet?) Provide information on the composition and density profile of the material that the nebula is expanding into (relation between environment and morphology) G11.2-0.3 Roberts et al. 2002

  8. PWN with LOFAR Where does the radio spectrum turn over? Flat spectrum in the radio with one or several spectral breaks necessary to connect with the X-rays At what low freq does this turn over? (does emission become self-absorbed?) PWNe will be dim, LOFAR’s huge collecting area will be critical LOFAR

  9. PWN with LOFAR Soft X-rayHard X-rayRadio G0.9+0.1 Dubner et al. 2008 G11.2-0.3 Roberts et al. 2003 Morphology and Extent Radio-emitting electrons have very long synchrotron lifetimes, trace energetic history of the pulsar Radio filaments and other features marking regions of instability LOFAR (long baselines incl.) will have similar (arcsecond) resolution to Chandra Compare X-ray/radio morph. Larger/smaller extent at low freq.?

  10. PWN with LOFAR Spatially Resolved Spectroscopy and Polarimetry Electron cooling as one moves away from pulsar Spectral steepening observed in X-rays (also in radio?) Polarimetry (not yet possible in X-rays) to trace magnetic structure far out in the nebula Relate to pulsar geometry and proper motion Direction of proper motion and spin axis Vela - Dodson et al. 2003

  11. PWN with LOFAR Pulsar Winds in Binary Systems Pulsar wind can be strongly confined near the pulsar Probe the wind at very small distance from the pulsar Double pulsar PSR J0737-3039 (within light cylinder) Black-widow pulsars (PSR B1957+20) Be-star companions (PSR B1259-63, LSI +61o 303?) LSI +61o 303 Dhawan et al. 2006

  12. PWN with LOFAR The TeV Sky in 2008 Target Galactic TeV sources figures courtesy Jim Hinton VERITAS (“northern HESS”) also coming online

  13. Summary PWN observations with LOFAR Find SNR shells around “naked” PWNe Map low-frequency spectrum and cut-off Morphology and extent Spatially resolved spectroscopy and polarimetry Find new PWNe in binary systems or associated with Galactic TeV sources Astrophysics with E-LOFAR - Hamburg - Sept. 16th -19th, 2008

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