We present a Chandra X-ray observation of the very high energy γ-ray
source HESSJ1640-465. We identify a point source surrounded by a diffuse
emission that fills the extended object previously detected by XMM Newton at
the centroid of the HESS source, within the shell of the radio supernova
remnant (SNR) G338.3-0.0. The morphology of the diffuse emission strongly
resembles that of a pulsar wind nebula (PWN) and extends asymmetrically to the
South-West of a point-source presented as a potential pulsar. The spectrum of
the putative pulsar and compact nebula are well-characterized by an absorbed
power-law model which, for a reasonable NH value of 14×1022cm−2, exhibit an index of 1.1 and 2.5 respectively, typical of
Vela-like PWNe. We demonstrate that, given the HI absorption features
observed along the line of sight, the SNR and the HII surrounding region are
probably connected and lie between 8 kpc and 13 kpc. The resulting age of the
system is between 10 and 30 kyr. For a 10 kpc distance (also consistent with
the X-ray absorption) the 2-10 keV X-ray luminosities of the putative pulsar
and nebula are LPSR∼1.3×1033d10kpc2erg.s−1 and LPWN∼3.9×1033d102erg.s−1
(d10=d/10kpc). Both the flux ratio of LPWN/LPSR∼3.4 and the total luminosity of this system predict a pulsar spin-down
power around E˙∼4×1036ergs−1. We finally
consider several reasons for the asymmetries observed in the PWN morphology and
discuss the potential association with the HESS source in term of a
time-dependent one-zone leptonic model.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figure