A Compact X-ray Source in the Radio Pulsar-Wind Nebula G141.2+5.0

Abstract

We report the results of a 50 ks Chandra observation of the recently discovered radio object G141.2+5.0, presumed to be a pulsar-wind nebula. We find a moderately bright unresolved X-ray source which we designate CXOU J033712.8 615302 coincident with the central peak radio emission. An absorbed power-law fit to the 241 counts describes the data well, with absorbing column NH = 6.7 (4.0, 9.7) × 1021 cm-2 and photon index = 1.8 (1.4, 2.2). For a distance of 4 kpc, the unabsorbed luminosity between 0.5 and 8 keV is 1.7+0.4-0.3 × 1032 erg s-1 (90\% confidence intervals). Both LX and are quite typical of pulsars in PWNe. No extended emission is seen; we estimate a conservative 3 σ upper limit to the surface brightness of any X-ray PWN near the point source to be 3 × 10-17 erg cm-2 s-1 arcsec-2 between 0.5 and 8 keV, assuming the same spectrum as the point source; for a nebula of diameter 13", the flux limit is 6\% of the flux of the point source. The steep radio spectrum of the PWN (α -0.7), if continued to the X-ray without a break, predicts LX\ (nebula) 1 × 1033 erg s-1, so additional spectral steepening between radio and X-rays is required, as is true of all known PWNe. The high Galactic latitude gives a z-distance of 350 pc above the Galactic plane, quite unusual for a Population I object.

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