The main issue of the pulsar magnetosphere is how the rotation power is
converted into both particle beams which causes pulsed emissions, and a highly
relativistic wind of electron-positron plasmas which forms surrounding nebulae
shining in X-rays and TeV gamma-rays. As a sequel of the first paper (Wada &
Shibata 2007), we carried out a three dimensional particle simulation for the
axisymmetric global magnetosphere. We present the results of additional
calculations, which are higher resolution model and higher pair creation rate
cases, and a detailed analysis for the solution. We confined to demonstrate the
cases of low pair creation rate, i.e., the magnetic field is fixed dipole. The
radiation drag of the plasma is taken in a form with the curvature radius along
the dipole magnetic field. The electrostatic interactions are calculated by a
programmable special purpose computer, GRAPE-DR (Makino et al 2007). Once pair
creation is onset in the outer gaps, the both signed particles begin to drift
across the closed magnetic field due to radiation drag, and they create
outflow. Eventually, the steady magnetosphere has outer gaps, both signed
outflow of plasma and a region in which the electric field is dominant
extending from the equator. In the steady state, the magnetic field made by
magnetospheric current is comparable to the dipole magnetic field outside of
several light radii from the star. In much more pair creation rate model, the
effect of modification of the magnetic field will bring about modification of
the outflow of the plasma, requiring further study with higher pair creation
rate model in a subsequent paper.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA