Fast moving pulsars as probes of interstellar medium

Abstract

Pulsars moving through ISM produce bow shocks detected in hydrogen Hα line emission. The morphology of the bow shock nebulae allows one to probe the properties of ISM on scales 0.01 pc and smaller. We performed 2D RMHD modeling of the pulsar bow shock and simulated the corresponding Hα emission morphology. We find that even a mild spatial inhomogeneity of ISM density, δ/ 1, leads to significant variations of the shape of the shock seen in Hα line emission. We successfully reproduce the morphology of the Guitar Nebula. We infer quasi-periodic density variations in the warm component of ISM with a characteristic length of 0.1~pc. Structures of this scale might be also responsible for the formation of the fine features seen at the forward shock of Tycho SNR in X-rays. Formation of such short periodic density structures in the warm component of ISM is puzzling, and bow-shock nebulae provide unique probes to study this phenomenon.

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