PSR J2021+4026 in the Gamma Cygni region: the first variable gamma-ray pulsar seen by the Fermi LAT

Abstract

Long-term monitoring of PSR J2021+4026 in the heart of the Cygnus region with the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) unveiled a sudden decrease in flux above 100 MeV over a time scale shorter than a week. The "jump" was near MJD 55850 (2011 October 16), with the flux decreasing from (8.330.08) × 10-10 erg cm-2 s-1 to (6.860.13) × 10-10 erg cm-2 s-1. Simultaneously, the frequency spindown rate increased from (7.8 0.1) × 10-13 Hz s-1 to (8.1 0.1) × 10-13 Hz s-1. Significant (> 5 sigma's) changes in the pulse profile and marginal (< 3 sigma's) changes in the emission spectrum occurred at the same time. There is also evidence for a small, steady flux increase over the three years preceding MJD 55850. This is the first observation at gamma-ray energies of mode changes and intermittent behavior, observed at radio wavelengths for other pulsars. We argue that the change in pulsed gamma-ray emission is due to a change in emission beaming and we speculate that it is precipitated by a shift in the magnetic field structure, leading to a change of either effective magnetic inclination or effective current.

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