AAS 199th meeting, Washington, DC, January 2002
Session 17. Pulsars, White Dwarfs and Galactic Gamma Ray Sources
Display, Monday, January 7, 2002, 9:20am-6:30pm, Exhibit Hall

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[17.02] X-ray Detection of Pulsar PSR B1757-24 and its Nebular Tail

V. M. Kaspi (McGill University), E. V. Gotthelf (Columbia University), B. M. Gaensler (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), M. Lyutikov (McGill University)

We report the first X-ray detection of the radio pulsar PSR B1757-24 using the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We detect point-source emission at the pulsar position plus a faint tail extending nearly 20'' east of the pulsar, in the same direction and with comparable morphology to the radio tail. Assuming the point-source X-ray emission is magnetospheric, the observed X-ray tail represents only ~0.01% of the pulsar's spin-down luminosity. This is significantly lower than the analogous efficiencies of most known X-ray nebulae surrounding rotation-powered pulsars. Assuming a non-thermal spectrum for the tail photons, we show that the tail is unlikely to be emission left behind following the passage of the pulsar, but rather is probably from synchrotron-emitting pulsar wind particles having flow velocity ~4000~km~s-1. We also show that there must be a significant break in the tail synchrotron spectrum between the radio and X-ray bands that is intrinsic to the particle spectrum. No emission is detected from the shell supernova remnant G5.4-1.2. The upper limits on remnant emission are unconstraining.


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