72 research outputs found

    The Pulsar Wind Nebulae contribution to gamma-rays

    Full text link
    Pulsar Wind Nebulae (PWNe) shine at multi-wavelengths and are expected to constitute the largest class of gamma-ray sources in our Galaxy. They are known to be very efficient particle accelerators: the Crab nebula, the PWNe class prototype, is the unique firmly identified leptonic PeVatron of the Galaxy to date, and most of the PeVatrons recently detected by LHAASO appear to be compatible with a pulsar origin. PWNe have been proved to be associated with the formation of misaligned X-ray tails and TeV halos, as sign of an efficient escape of energetic particles from the PWN into the surrounding medium. With the advent of the Cherenkov Telescope Array we expect that ~200 new PWNe will be detected. Being able to correctly model their multi-wavelength spectral properties, spatial and spectral morphology at gamma-rays is then topical today. This in particular means we should be able to account for their different evolutionary phases, and to correctly determine the influence they have on the spectral properties of the source. This indeed reflects directly on the expectation of how many PWNe will be detected at gamma-rays. Finally, the identification of PWNe in future gamma-ray data, not only is relevant for their scientific importance, but also to allow for the identification of less prominent sources that might be hidden by the background of non-identified PWNe.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    Evolved Pulsar Wind Nebulae

    Full text link
    Based on the expected population of core collapse supernova remnants and the huge number of detected pulsars in the Galaxy, still representing only a fraction of the real population, pulsar wind nebulae are likely to constitute one of the largest classes of {extended} Galactic sources in many energy bands. For simple evolutionary reasons, the majority of the population is made of evolved systems, whose detection and identification are complicated by their reduced luminosity, the possible lack of X-ray emission (that fades progressively away with the age of the pulsar), and by their modified morphology with respect to young systems. Nevertheless they have gained renewed attention in recent years, following the detection of misaligned X-ray tails protruding from an increasing number of nebulae created by fast moving pulsars, and of extended TeV halos surrounding aged systems. Both these features are clear signs of an efficient escape of particles, with energy close to the maximum acceleration limit of the pulsar. Here we discuss the properties of those evolved systems and what we have understood about the process of particle escape, and the formation of observed features.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure

    Numerical simulations of mass loading in the tails of Bow Shock Pulsar Wind Nebulae

    Get PDF
    When a pulsar is moving through a partially ionized medium, a fraction of neutral Hydrogen atoms penetrate inside the pulsar wind and can be photo-ionized by the nebula UV radiation. The resulting protons remains attached to the magnetic field of the light leptonic pulsar wind enhancing its inertia and changing the flow dynamics of the wind. We present here the first numerical simulations of such effect in the tails of bow shock nebulae. We produce a set of different models representative of pulsars moving in the interstellar medium with different velocities, from highly subsonic to supersonic, by means of 2D hydrodynamic relativistic simulations. We compare the different tail morphologies with results from theoretical models of mass loading in bow shocks. As predicted by analytical models we observe a fast sideways expansion of the tail with the formation of secondary shocks in the ISM. This effect could be at the origin of the head-and-shoulder morphology observed in many BSPWNe.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl

    Constraints on particle acceleration sites in the Crab Nebula from relativistic MHD simulations

    Get PDF
    The Crab Nebula is one of the most efficient accelerators in the Galaxy and the only galactic source showing direct evidence of PeV particles. In spite of this, the physical process behind such effective acceleration is still a deep mystery. While particle acceleration, at least at the highest energies, is commonly thought to occur at the pulsar wind termination shock, the properties of the upstream flow are thought to be non-uniform along the shock surface, and important constraints on the mechanism at work come from exact knowledge of where along this surface particles are being accelerated. Here we use axisymmetric relativistic MHD simulations to obtain constraints on the acceleration site(s) of particles of different energies in the Crab Nebula. Various scenarios are considered for the injection of particles responsible for synchrotron radiation in the different frequency bands, radio, optical and X-rays. The resulting emission properties are compared with available data on the multi wavelength time variability of the inner nebula. Our main result is that the X-ray emitting particles are accelerated in the equatorial region of the pulsar wind. Possible implications on the nature of the acceleration mechanism are discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 2 table

    Experimental Investigation on the Effect of Shot Peening and Deep Rolling on the Fatigue Response of High Strength Fasteners

    Get PDF
    Shot-peening and deep rolling are mechanical surface treatments that are commonly applied to enhance the fatigue performances of components, owing to their capacity to generate compressive residual stresses and induce work hardening. However, literature is still poor of published data concerning the application of these treatments to high strength steels fasteners, although these represent a class of components among the most widespread. In the present work, the impact of deep rolling and shot-peening performed in the underhead radius of two set of fasteners made of 36NiCrMo and 42CrMoV for fatigue life enhancement has been investigated. The experimental tests consisted of six combinations of shot-peening and deep rolling, including the non-treated state. Two test campaigns have been sequentially carried out with dierent process parameters and treatment sequences. The results always showed a beneficial impact of the deep rolling on fatigue, especially for the 42CrMoV steel. Conversely, the eect of the shot-peening strongly depended on the selected set of parameters, alternatively leading to an improvement or a worsening of the fatigue life in relation to the level of induced surface roughness

    From young to old: the evolutionary path of Pulsar Wind Nebulae

    Full text link
    Pulsar wind nebulae are fascinating systems, and archetypal sources for high-energy astrophysics in general. Due to their vicinity, brightness, to the fact that they shine at multi-wavelengths, and especially to their long-living emission at gamma-rays, modelling their properties is particularly important for the correct interpretation of the visible Galaxy. A complication in this respect is the variety of properties and morphologies they show at different ages. Here we discuss the differences among the evolutionary phases of pulsar wind nebulae, how they have been modeled in the past and what progresses have been recently made. We approach the discussion from a phenomenological, theoretical (especially numerical) and observational point of view, with particular attention to the most recent results and open questions about the physics of such intriguing sources.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, 2 table

    Full-3D relativistic MHD simulations of Bow Shock Pulsar Wind Nebulae: dynamics

    Get PDF
    Bow shock pulsar wind nebulae (BSPWNe) are know to show a large variety of shapes and morphologies, both when comparing different objects, and for the same object in different energy bands. It is unclear if such a variety is related to differences in the pulsar wind properties, or to differences in the conditions of the ambient medium. We present here a set of full three-dimensional, relativistic and magneto-hydrodynamic simulations of BSPWNe, with the intention of determining how differences in the injection conditions by the pulsar wind reflect in the nebular dynamics. To achieve a good coverage of the available parameter space we have run several simulations varying those parameters that are most representative of the wind properties: the latitudinal anisotropy of the wind energy flux with respect to the pulsar spin axis, the level of magnetization, the inclination of the pulsar spin axis with respect to the pulsar direction of motion. We have followed the dynamics in these systems, not just in the very head, but also in the tail, trying to assess if and how the system retains memory of the injection at large distances from the pulsar itself. In this paper we focus our attention on the characterization of the fluid structure and magnetic field properties. We have tried to evaluate the level of turbulence in the tail, and its relation to injection, the survival of current sheets, and the degree of mixing between the shocked ambient medium and the relativistic pulsar wind material.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, 1 tabl

    The crab pulsar and nebula as seen in gamma-rays

    Get PDF
    Slightly more than 30 years ago, Whipple detection of the Crab Nebula was the start of Very High Energy gamma-ray astronomy. Since then, gamma-ray observations of this source have continued to provide new surprises and challenges to theories, with the detection of fast variability, pulsed emission up to unexpectedly high energy, and the very recent detection of photons with energy exceeding 1 PeV. In this article, we review the impact of gamma-ray observations on our understanding of this extraordinary accelerator

    On the origin of jet-like features in bow shock pulsar wind nebulae

    Get PDF
    Bow shock pulsar wind nebulae are a large class of non-thermal synchrotron sources associated to old pulsars that have emerged from their parent supernova remnant and are directly interacting with the interstellar medium. Within this class a few objects show extended X-ray features, generally referred as `jets', that defies all the expectations from the canonical MHD models, being strongly misaligned respect to the pulsar direction of motion. It has been suggested that these jets might originate from high energy particles that escape from the system. Here we investigate this possibility, computing particle trajectories on top of a 3D relativistic MHD model of the flow and magnetic field structure, and we show not only that beamed escape is possible, but that it can easily be asymmetric and charge separated, which as we will discuss are important aspects to explain known objects
    • …
    corecore