RXTE Observation of PSR B0656+14

Abstract

PSR B0656+14 was observed by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) with the proportional counter array (PCA) and the high-energy x-ray timing experiment (HEXTE) for 160 ksec during August 22 -- September 3, 1997. No pulsation was firmly found in the timing analysis, in which the contemporaneous radio ephemeris and various statistical tests were applied for searching evidence of pulsation. A marginal detection of pulsation at a confidence level of 95.5% based on the H-test was found with data in the whole HEXTE energy band. In the energy band of 2-10 keV the RXTE PCA upper limits are about one order of magnitude lower than that from ASCA GIS data. If the CGRO EGRET detection of this pulsar is real, considering the common trait that most EGRET-detected pulsars have a cooling spectrum in hard x-ray and gamma ray energy bands, the estimated RXTE upper limits indicate a deviation (low-energy turn-over) from a cooling spectrum starting from 20 keV or higher. It in turn suggests an outer-magnetospheric synchrotron-radiation origin for high-energy emissions from PSR B0656+14. The RXTE PCA upper limits also suggest that a reported power-law component based on ASCA SIS data in 1-10 keV fitted jointly with ROSAT data, if real, should be mainly unpulsed.

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