The Vela Pulsar's proper motion and parallax derived from VLBI observations
Abstract
The Vela pulsar is the brightest pulsar at radio wavelengths. It was the object that told us (via its glitching) that pulsars were solid rotating bodies not oscillating ones. Along with the Crab pulsar is it the source of many of the models of pulsar behavior. Therefore it is of vital importance to know how far away it is, and its origin. The proper motion and parallax for the Vela pulsar have been derived from 2.3 and 8.4 GHz Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations. The data spans 6.8 years and consists of eleven epochs. We find a proper motion of μα cosδ= -49.61 0.06, μδ= 29.8 0.1 and a parallax of 3.4 0.2 mas, which is equivalent to a distance of 293-17+19 pc. When we subtract out the galactic rotation and solar peculiar velocity we find μ* = 45 1.3 with a position angle (PA) of 3011.8 which implies that the proper motion has a small but significant offset from the X-ray nebula's symmetry axis.
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