Michael J. Mayer, Julia Brucker, Ira Jung, Kathrin Valerius, Christian Stegmann
Energetic pulsars power winds of relativistic leptons which produce photon
nebulae (so-called pulsar wind nebulae, PWNe) detectable across the
electromagnetic spectrum up to energies of several TeV. The spectral energy
distribution has a double-humped structure: the first hump lies in the X-ray
regime, the second in the gamma-ray range. The X-ray emission is generally
understood as synchrotron radiation by highly energetic electrons, the
gamma-ray emission as Inverse Compton scattering of energetic electrons with
ambient photon fields. The evolution of the spectral energy distribution is
influenced by the time-dependent spin-down of the pulsar and the decrease of
the magnetic field strength with time. Thus, the present spectral appearance of
a PWN depends on the age of the pulsar: while young PWNe are bright in X-rays
and gamma-rays, the X-ray emission of evolved PWNe is suppressed. Hence,
evolved PWNe may offer an explanation of the nature of some of the unidentified
VHE gamma-ray sources not yet associated with a counterpart in other
high-energy ranges. The purpose of this work is to develop a model which allows
to calculate the expected X-ray fluxes of unidentified VHE gamma-ray sources
considered to be PWN candidates. Such an estimate helps to evaluate the
prospects of detecting the X-ray signal in deep observations with current X-ray
observatories in future studies. We present a time-dependent leptonic model
which predicts the broad-band emission of a PWN according to the
characteristics of its pulsar. The values of the free parameters of the model
are determined by a fit to observational VHE gamma-ray data. For a sample of
representative PWNe, the resulting model predictions in the X-ray and gamma-ray
range are compared to observations. The comparison shows that the high-energy
emission of identified PWNe from different states of evolution is predicted
correctly by the model.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.1455
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