Deep optical observations of the gamma-ray pulsar PSR J0007+7303 in the CTA 1 supernova remnant

Abstract

The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) discovered the time signature of a radio-silent pulsar coincident with RX J0007.0+7302, a plerion-like X-ray source at the centre of the CTA 1 supernova remnant. The inferred timing parameters of the gamma-ray pulsar PSR J0007+7303 (P=315.8 ms; dotP3.6 10-13 s s-1) point to a Vela-like neutron star, with an age comparable to that of CTA 1. The PSR J0007+7303 low distance ( 1.4 kpc), interstellar absorption (AV 1.6), and relatively high energy loss rate (dotE 4.5 1035 erg s-1), make it a suitable candidate for an optical follow-up. Here, we present deep optical observations of PSR J0007+7303. The pulsar is not detected in the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) images down to a limit of r' 27.6 (3 sigma), the deepest ever obtained for this pulsar, while William Herschel Telescope (WHT) images yield a limit of V 26.9. Our r'-band limit corresponds to an optical emission efficiency ηopt= Lopt/dotE < 9.4 10-8. This limit is more constraining than those derived for other Vela-like pulsars, but is still above the measured optical efficiency of the Vela pulsar. We compared the optical upper limits with the extrapolation of the XMM-Newton X-ray spectrum and found that the optical emission is compatible with the extrapolation of the X-ray power-law component, at variance with what is observed, e.g. in the Vela pulsar.

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