A nascent neutron star may be exposed to fallback accretion soon after the
proto-neutron star stage. This high accretion episode can submerge the magnetic
field deep in the crust. The diffusion of the magnetic field back to the
surface will take hundreds to millions of years depending on the amount of mass
accreted and the consequent depth the field is buried. Neutron stars with large
kick velocities will accrete less amount of fallback material leading to
shallower submergence of their fields and shorter time-scales for the growth of
their fields. We obtain the relation τOhm∝v−1 between
the space velocity of the neutron star and Ohmic time-scale for the growth of
the magnetic field. We compare this with the relation between the measured
transverse velocities, v⊥ and the field growth time-scales,
μ/μ˙, inferred from the measured braking indices. We find that the
observational data is consistent with the theoretical prediction though the
small number of data precludes a strong conclusion. Measurement of the
transverse velocities of pulsars B1509−58, J1846−0258, J1119−6127 and
J1734−3333 would increase the number of the data and strongly contribute to
understanding whether pulsar fields grow following fallback accretion.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS Letters. Title and abstract are change