We have performed a deep optical imaging of 3C 58 SNR with the NOT in the B
and V bands to detect the optical counterpart of the associated pulsar
J0295+6449 and its torus-like wind nebula visible in X-rays. We analyzed our
data together with the archival data obtained with the Chandra in X-rays and
with the Spitzer in the mid-IR. We detect a faint extended elliptical object
with B=24.06 and V=23.11 whose peak brightness and center position are
consistent at the sub-arcsecond level with the position of the pulsar. Its
morphology and orientation are in excellent agreement with the torus-like
pulsar nebula, seen almost edge on in X-rays although its extension is only
about a half of that in X-rays. In the optical we likely see only the brightest
central part of the torus with the pulsar. The object is identical to the
counterpart of the torus recently detected in the mid-IR. The estimated pulsar
contribution to the optical flux is less than 10%. Combinig the optical/mid-IR
fluxes and X-ray power-law spectrum extracted from the spatial region
constrained by the optical/IR source extent we compile a tentative
multi-wavelength spectrum of the central part of the nebula. Within
uncertainties of the interstellar extinction it is reminiscent of either the
Crab or B0540-69 pulsar wind nebula spectra. The properties of the object
strongly suggest it to be the optical counterpart of the 3C 58 pulsar + its
wind nebula system, making 3C 58 the third member of such a class of the
torus-like systems identified in the optical and mid-IR.Comment: 12 pages including 7 figures, submitted for publication in A&A. For
high resolution images, see http://www.ioffe.ru/astro/NSG/obs/3C58