Detection of X-ray emission from the very old pulsar J0108-1431

29Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

PSR J0108-1431 is a nearby, 170 Myr old, very faint radio pulsar near the "pulsar death line" in the P- diagram. We observed the pulsar field with the Chandra X-ray Observatory and detected a point source (53 counts in a 30 ks exposure; energy flux (9 ± 2) × 10-15 erg cm -2 s-1 in the 0.3-8 keV band) close to the radio pulsar position. Based on the large X-ray/optical flux ratio at the X-ray source position, we conclude that the source is the X-ray counterpart of PSR J0108-1431. The pulsar spectrum can be described by a power-law model with photon index Γ ≈ 2.2 and luminosity L 0.3-8 keV ≈ 2 × 1028 d 2130 erg s-1, or by a blackbody model with temperature kT ≈ 0.28 keV and bolometric luminosity L bol ≈ 1.3 × 1028 d 2130 erg s-1, for a plausible hydrogen column density N H = 7.3 × 1019 cm-2 (d 130 = d/130 pc). The pulsar converts ∼0.4% of its spin-down power into X-ray luminosity, i.e., its X-ray efficiency is higher than for most younger pulsars. From the comparison of the X-ray position with the previously measured radio positions, we estimated the pulsar proper motion of 0.2 arcsec yr-1 (V ≈ 130d 130 km s-1), in the south-southeast direction. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Pavlov, G. G., Kargaltsev, O., Wong, J. A., & Garmire, G. P. (2009). Detection of X-ray emission from the very old pulsar J0108-1431. Astrophysical Journal, 691(1), 458–464. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/691/1/458

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free