We report the results of the spectral analysis of two observations of the
Vela pulsar with the Chandra X-ray observatory. The spectrum of the pulsar does
not show statistically significant spectral lines in the observed 0.25-8.0 keV
band. Similar to middle-aged pulsars with detected thermal emission, the
spectrum consists of two distinct components. The softer component can be
modeled as a magnetic hydrogen atmosphere spectrum - for the pulsar magnetic
field B=3×1012 G and neutron star mass M=1.4M⊙ and radius
R∞=13 km, we obtain \tef^\infty =0.68\pm 0.03 MK, Lbol∞=(2.6±0.2)×1032 erg s−1, d=210±20 pc (the
effective temperature, bolometric luminosity, and radius are as measured by a
distant observer). The effective temperature is lower than that predicted by
standard neutron star cooling models. A standard blackbody fit gives T∞=1.49±0.04 MK, Lbol∞=(1.5±0.4)×1032d2502
erg s−1 (d250 is the distance in units of 250 pc); the blackbody
temperature corresponds to a radius, R∞=(2.1±0.2)d250 km, much
smaller than realistic neutron star radii. The harder component can be modeled
as a power-law spectrum, with parameters depending on the model adopted for the
soft component - γ=1.5±0.3, Lx=(1.5±0.4)×1031d2502 erg s−1 and γ=2.7±0.4, Lx=(4.2±0.6)×1031d2502 erg s−1 for the hydrogen atmosphere and blackbody soft
component, respectively (γ is the photon index, Lx is the luminosity
in the 0.2--8 keV band). The extrapolation of the power-law component of the
former fit towards lower energies matches the optical flux at γ≃1.35--1.45.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, three figures; color figure 1 can be found at
http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/~zavlin/pub_list.htm