4.7 Article

Using HAWC to discover invisible pulsars

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 96, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.96.103016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [PHY-1404311]
  2. NASA [NNX15AB18G]
  3. Simons Foundation
  4. Government of Canada through Industry Canada
  5. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation
  6. Division Of Physics
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1404311] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Observations by HAWC and Milagro have detected bright and spatially extended TeV gamma-ray sources surrounding the Geminga and Monogem pulsars. We argue that these observations, along with a substantial population of other extended TeV sources coincident with pulsar wind nebulae, constitute a new morphological class of spatially extended TeV halos. We show that HAWCs wide field of view unlocks an expansive parameter space of TeV halos not observable by atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. Under the assumption that Geminga and Monogem are typical middle-aged pulsars, we show that ten-year HAWC observations should eventually observe 37(-13)(+17) middle-aged TeV halos that correspond to pulsars whose radio emission is not beamed towards Earth. Depending on the extrapolation of the TeV halo efficiency to young pulsars, HAWC could detect more than 100 TeV halos from misaligned pulsars. These pulsars have historically been difficult to detect with existing multiwavelength observations. TeV halos will constitute a significant fraction of all HAWC sources, allowing follow-up observations to efficiently find pulsar wind nebulae and thermal pulsar emission. The observation and subsequent multi-wavelength follow-up of TeV halos will have significant implications for our understanding of pulsar beam geometries, the evolution of pulsar wind nebulae, the diffusion of cosmic rays near energetic pulsars, and the contribution of pulsars to the cosmic-ray positron excess.

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