4.7 Article

Likely optical counterpart of the cool middle-aged pulsar J1957+5033

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 513, Issue 4, Pages 6088-6094

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac1293

Keywords

stars: neutron; pulsars: general; pulsars: individual: PSR J1957+5033

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [19-52-12013 NNIO a]
  2. PAPIIT [IN102120]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [WE 1312/53-1]
  4. [0671-2020-0052]

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This article introduces an 840,000-year-old pulsar PSR J1957+5033. Optical observations were conducted using a 10.4-metre telescope, and a potential optical counterpart was discovered. Analysis suggests that thermal emission from the surface of the neutron star has a significant contribution to the optical flux. This reveals the potential of optical data in providing new constraints on the temperature and distance of pulsars.
The 840-kyr-old pulsar PSR J1957+5033, detected so far only in gamma- and X-rays, is a nearby and rather cool neutron star with a temperature of 0.2-0.3 MK, a distance of less than or similar to 1kpc, and a small colour reddening excess E(B - V) approximate to 0.03. These properties make it an ideal candidate to detect in the optical to get additional constraints on its parameters. We thus performed the first deep optical observations of the pulsar with the 10.4 m Gran Telescopio Canarias in the g' band and found its possible counterpart with g' = 27.63 +/- 0.26. The counterpart candidate position is consistent with the X-ray coordinates of the pulsar within the 0.5 arcsec accuracy. Assuming that this is the real counterpart, we analysed the pulsar X-ray spectrum together with the derived optical flux density. As a result, we found that the thermal emission from the bulk surface of the cooling neutron star can significantly contribute to its optical flux. Our multiwavelength spectral analysis favours the pulsar nature of the detected optical source, since it provides physically adequate parameters of the pulsar emission. We show that the optical data can provide new constraints on the pulsar temperature and distance.

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