Bibcode
Kirichenko, A.; Danilenko, Andrey; Shternin, Peter; Shibanov, Yuriy; Ryspaeva, Elizaveta; Zyuzin, Dima; Durant, Martin; Kargaltsev, Oleg; Pavlov, George; Cabrera-Lavers, A.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 802, Issue 1, article id. 17, 8 pp. (2015).
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2015
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Citations
31
Refereed citations
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Description
PSR J2021+3651 is a 17 kyr old rotation powered pulsar detected in the
radio, X-rays, and γ-rays. It powers a torus-like pulsar wind
nebula with jets, dubbed the Dragonfly, which is very similar to that of
the Vela pulsar. The Dragonfly is likely associated with the extended
TeV source VER J2019+368 and extended radio emission. We conducted first
deep optical observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias in the Sloan
r‧ band to search for optical counterparts of the pulsar and its
nebula. No counterparts were detected down to r‧ ≳ 27.2 and
≳24.8 for the point-like pulsar and the compact X-ray nebula,
respectively. We also reanalyzed Chandra archival X-ray data taking into
account an interstellar extinction–distance relation, constructed
by us for the Dragonfly line of sight using the red-clump stars as
standard candles. This allowed us to constrain the distance to the
pulsar, D=1.8-1.4+1.7 kpc at 90% confidence. It is
much smaller than the dispersion measure distance of ∼12 kpc but
compatible with a γ-ray “pseudo-distance” of 1 kpc.
Based on that and the optical upper limits, we conclude that PSR
J2021+3651, similar to the Vela pulsar, is a very inefficient nonthermal
emitter in the optical and X-rays, while its γ-ray efficiency is
consistent with an average efficiency for γ-pulsars of similar
age. Our optical flux upper limit for the pulsar is consistent with the
long-wavelength extrapolation of its X-ray spectrum while the nebula
flux upper limit does not constrain the respective extrapolation.
Based on observations made with the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC),
instaled in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the
Instituto de Astrofsica de Canarias, in the island of La Palma,
programme GTC3-11B.
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