HESS J1825-137: A pulsar wind nebula associated with PSR B1823-13?
Abstract
HESS J1825-137 was detected with a significance of 8.1 σ in the Galactic Plane survey conducted with the H.E.S.S. instrument in 2004. Both HESS J1825-137 and the X-ray pulsar wind nebula G18.0--0.7 (associated with the Vela-like pulsar PSR B1823-13) are offset south of the pulsar, which may be the result of the SNR expanding into an inhomogeneous medium. The TeV size ( 35 pc, for a distance of 4 kpc) is 6 times larger than the X-ray size, which may be the result of propagation effects as a result of the longer lifetime of TeV emitting electrons, compared to the relatively short lifetime of keV synchrotron emitting electrons. The TeV photon spectral index of 2.4 can also be related to the extended PWN X-ray synchrotron photon index of 2.3, if this spectrum is dominated by synchrotron cooling. The anomalously large size of the pulsar wind nebula can be explained if the pulsar was born with a relatively large initial spindown power and braking index n 2, provided that the SNR expanded into the hot ISM with relatively low density ( 0.003 cm-3).
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