Title: Diversity across the P P Diagram
1.
Diversity across the P P Diagram
R. N. Manchester
Australia Telescope National Facility, CSIRO
Sydney Australia
Summary
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- The P P diagram extended
- Accretion-powered pulsars
- Globular-cluster pulsars
- Magnetars, high-energy pulsars and SNR
associations - Binary pulsars
- Ordinary pulsars
2.
The P P Diagram
Galactic Disk pulsars
P Pulsar period P dP/dt slow-down rate
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- For most pulsars P 10-15
- MSPs have P smaller by about 5 orders of
magnitude - Most MSPs are binary, but few normal pulsars are
- P/(2P) is an indicator of pulsar age
- Surface dipole magnetic field (PP)1/2
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.
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Great diversity in the pulsar population!
Data from ATNF Pulsar Catalogue, V1.36
www.atnf.csiro.au/research/pulsar/psrcat
(Manchester et al. 2005)
3The Extended P P Diagram
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Includes
- Globular cluster pulsars
- Accretion-powered pulsars LMXBs and HMXBs
- Non-degenerate stellar pulsars (Brown dwarfs,
Magnetic A stars)
Many GC pulsars and accretion-powered pulsars
have P lt 0 (square symbol)
.
4Pulse Period Histogram
- Currently1886 known (published) pulsars
- 1674 rotation-powered disk pulsars
- 192 MSPs
- 108 in globular clusters
- 56 accretion-powered pulsars
- 13 AXP/SGR
- 7 XDINs
- 4 non-degenerate pulsars
- 20 extra-galactic pulsars
5(No Transcript)
6The Non-Degenerate Stellar Pulsar CU Vir
- Magnetic chemically-peculiar A star
- Rotation period 44988.746 seconds
- Two sharp radio pulses per period
- Broad-band 100 circular emission
- Probably electron cyclotron maser emission
coherent emission in direction perpendicular to
electron motion, i.e., along field line (Melrose
Dulk 1982) - Magnetic-pole model radius-to-frequency
mapping(!) - Step increases in period, a few seconds every
10-15 years P 10-13
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- Three other NDG pulsars known
- All brown dwarfs
- Periods in range 2.1 3.5 hours
(Trigilio et al. 2008)
7Accretion-Powered Pulsars
- Two main groups LMXBs and HMXBs
- Distinct group of MSPs all LMXBs
- Two classes of MSP persistent and burst
(but note that persistent class often seen only
in bursts!) - X-ray emission in persistent type from
accretion column (AMSP) - X-ray emission in burst type from nuclear
burning on NS surface (Type I burst) (NMSP)
8High-mass X-ray Binary Pulsars
- Neutron star with O- or B-star companion,
typically 10 30 solar masses often Be star - Companion generally identified optically
- 30 with known pulsation period
- Periods range from few seconds to few hundred
seconds - Orbital periods range from few days to few
hundred days - Wind-fed accretion spin-up and spin-down
- Cen X-3 is an example
- Comp. V779 Cen, O6 star
- Highly modulated X-ray emission power-law
spectrum with absorption - P 4.82 s, Pb 2.08 d
Cen X-3
(Suchy et al. 2008)
9Low Mass X-ray Binaries Long-Period Systems
- Neutron star with companion of low mass,
generally lt 1 Msun - Pulse periods in range 1 s to 100 s
- Orbital periods in the range 0.02 300 days
- X-ray spectrum power-law plus blackbody
- 4U 1626-67 is an example
- An ultra-compact system Pb 42 min
- Pulse period 7.7 s
- Episodes of spin-up and spin-down with similar
P - Companion mass 0.04 Msun
- Optically identified (17 mag) optical emission
strongly modulated at pulse period
4U 1626-67 7.7 sec
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(Krause et al. 2007)
10Accretion-Powered (Persistent) MSPs
- Highly coherent pulsations
- Ten systems known
- Pulse frequencies in range 180 600 Hz
- Orbital periods in range 0.02 0.4 days (two
systems dont yet have identified orbits) - Four systems are ultra-compact these have
truly persistent emission - In the remaining systems, pulsations are only
seen in transient outbursts lasting weeks - Both spin-up and spin-down observed
- Accretion rates very low channelled by polar
field lines modulation at NS spin period
Progenitors of radio MSPs!
(Wijnands 2005 Watts 2005 Galloway et al. 2005)
11Nuclear-powered (Type I) Burst MSPs
4U 1728-34
- Pulsations seen in short (few second) Type I
bursts due to nuclear burning on the
neutron-star surface - Pulse frequency increases in initial phase of
burst but stabilises toward the end
(Strohmayer et al 1996)
- 12 or 13 systems known (XTE J1739-285 with
modulation at 1122 Hz is controversial) - Pulse frequencies in the range 44 619 (or
maybe 1122) Hz - Type I bursts have been observed from five of
the accretion-powered MSPs (not the ultra-compact
systems) - These detections confirm that the asymptotic
frequency is the neutron-star spin frequency
12Globular Cluster Pulsars
- 140 pulsars in 26 clusters
- All recycled, most with P lt 50 ms
- Observed P values are much larger on average
than for disk MSPs and about half are negative
acceleration in cluster gravitational potential
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Paulo Freires web page www.naic.edu/pfreire/GC
psr.html
13Two Rich Clusters
47 Tucanae
- 23 MSPs found at Parkes from 1990, 12 binary
- All very short period 2.6 5.8 ms
- Binary periods also short 0.1 2.4 days, all
circular - 19 detected as soft X-ray sources
X-ray IDs in 47 Tuc
Terzan 5
- 33 pulsars discovered, all but two at GBT since
2005 - Much wider range of periods 1.396 ms (716 Hz)
to 80 ms - Also wider range of orbital periods 1.7 hours
to 60 days - Two highly eccentric systems 0.43 (I) and 0.35
(J)
(Bogdanov et al. 2006)
14Ionized gas in 47 Tucanae
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- Correlation of DM and P
- P due to acceleration in cluster potential
- Pulsars on far side of cluster have higher DM
- Gas density 0.07 cm-3, about 100 times local
density - Total mass of gas in cluster 0.1 Msun
.
(Freire et al. 2001)
First detection of intra-cluster gas in a
globular cluster!
15More Diversity!
- SGR/AXPs
- XDINSs
- High-B radio pulsars
- RRATs
- X-ray Gamma-ray pulsars
- SNR associations
- Double NS systems
- Ordinary pulsars!
16Soft Gamma-ray Repeaters (SGRs) and Anomalous
X-ray Pulsars (AXPs)
- SGRs intense bursts of soft gamma-ray emission
with a modulated tail of weaker emission three
known - AXPs sources of modulated X-ray emission ten
known - Pulse periods in range 5 12 second no
evidence for binary motion - Very high P implies ultra-strong magnetic fields
(1014 1015 G) and young age (most 1000 years)
- - Possible SNR associations for SGRs and one AXP
- X-ray/gamma-ray luminosities much higher than
spin-down luminosity powered by decay of strong
magnetic field magnetars - Pulse timing very irregular glitches seen for
both AXPs and SGRs
.
SGR 1806-20
(Palmer et al. 2005)
17Transient Pulsed Radio Emission from Magnetars
XTE J1810-197 PSR J1808-2024
- 2003 outburst, X-ray pulsations at 5.54 s
- Detected as a radio source at VLA in 2005
- Observed in March 2006 at Parkes strong radio
pulses detected! - Pulse shape highly variable
- Very unusual flat spectrum - individual pulses
detected in GBT obs at 42 GHz!
(Camilo et al. 2006)
1E1547.05408 PSR J1550-5418
Sandro Mereghetti talk!
- X-ray source centred in SNR G327.24 0.13
tentatively identified as an AXP (Gelfand
Gaensler 2008) no X-ray pulsations detectable - Radio observations at Parkes detected strong
pulsations with P 2.07 s - Pulse shape highly variable
- P 2 x 10-11 magnetar!
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(Camilo et al. 2007)
18More Diversity!
- SGR/AXPs
- XDINSs
- High-B radio pulsars
- RRATs
- X-ray Gamma-ray pulsars
- SNR associations
- Double NS systems
- Ordinary pulsars!
19X-ray Dim Isolated Neutron Stars (XDINS)
- Very soft and low-luminosity X-ray sources
- Seven known (The Magnificent Seven)
- Blackbody spectrum
- X-ray emission periodically modulated, periods
in the range 3 12 seconds - All but one slowing down, P 10-12 10-14
implying Bs 1013 G - Optical IDs for most of them
- No radio counterparts and no SNR associations
- Consistent with nearby (50 -300 pc) isolated
middle-aged neutron stars - Not-quite magnetars?
RX J1308.62127 (P 10.31 s)
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Roberto Turolla talk!
(Schwope et al. 2005)
20High-B Radio Psrs and RRATs
- Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey detected two new
classes of radio pulsar - HBRPs are normal radio pulsars with long periods
(1 7 s) and high P - Located near AXPs on P P diagram, but very
different properties - RRATs have isolated strong radio pulses at
intervals of minutes to hours - Careful analysis revealed underlying periodicity
with P in range 0.4 7 s
.
.
Michael Kramer talk!
21More Diversity!
- SGR/AXPs
- XDINSs
- High-B radio pulsars
- RRATs
- X-ray Gamma-ray pulsars
- SNR associations
- Double NS systems
- Ordinary pulsars!
22High-Energy Pulsars
- Many young pulsars have high-energy non-thermal
pulsed emission - For Crab pulsar, pulse components aligned in
phase, but not for Vela - For some pulsars, no detectable radio emission,
e.g. Geminga - Thermal X-ray emission from NS surface also
observed - Emitted from hot polar-cap regions
Andy Shearer Werner Becker talks!
(Becker 2009)
23Fermi Gamma-Ray Observatory
24Fermi MSP Detections
- Fermi searched for pulsed gamma-ray emission
from MSPs - Data folded using radio timing ephemerides
- Pulsed emission detected from eight MSPs with
high E (Abdo et al. 2009) - Pulse profiles and spectra are remarkably
similar to those of young pulsars - Suggests that BLC is important in determining
gamma-ray properties
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Tuesday mornings talks!
25Supernova Remnant Associations
- About 40 mostly-young pulsars are associated
with SNR - Includes five AXP/SGR
- Two associations are for pulsars with very large
characteristic ages PSR J0821-4300 (Puppis A)
and PSR J1210-5226 (G296.510.0) - These are from the Compact Central Objects
(CCO) group of X-ray sources - Born with spin periods essentially the same as
their current period
Pat Slaness talk!
26Pulsar Wind Nebulae
- Relativistic particles and magnetic fields
ejected from many young pulsars form surrounding
synchrotron nebula a pulsar wind nebula (PWN) - Flows are very anisotropic jets and torii
determine pulsar spin axis!
Thursday mornings talks!
G11.2-0.3 -- PSR J1811-1925
Crab
Vela
Red LE X-ray Green Radio Blue HE X-ray
(Roberts et al. 2003)
Chandra (Wiesskopf et al. 2000 Pavlov et al 2004)
27More Diversity!
- SGR/AXPs
- XDINSs
- High-B radio pulsars
- RRATs
- X-ray Gamma-ray pulsars
- SNR associations
- Binary pulsars
- Ordinary pulsars!
28Types of Binary Pulsars
(Stairs 2004)
- High-mass MS companion
- P medium-long, Pb large, highly eccentric orbit,
youngish pulsar - 4 known, e.g. B1259-63
- Double neutron-star systems
- P medium-short, Pb 1 day, highly eccentric
orbit, pulsar old - 8 2? known, e.g. B191316, J0737-3039A/B
- Young pulsar with massive WD companion
- P medium-long, Pb 1 day, eccentric orbit,
youngish pulsar - 2 known, e.g. J1141-6545
- Pulsars with planets
- MSP, planet orbits from months to years, circular
- 2 known, e.g. B125712
- Intermediate-Mass systems
- P medium-short, Pb days, circular orbit, massive
WD companion, old pulsar 12 2? known, e.g.
B065564 - Low-mass systems
- MSP, Pb hours to years, circular orbit, low-mass
WD, very old pulsar - 105 known, 55 in globular clusters, e.g.
J0437-4715, 47Tuc J
29Pulsar period vs Binary period
- Intermediate-mass systems, high-mass WD companion
- Low-mass systems, low mass WD companion
30Companion Mass - Pulsar Period
- High-mass systems have little or no recycling
long pulsar period - Low-mass systems evolve slowly and are spun up
to shorter periods - GC systems dominate low-P, low-mass end
- Different evolution?
- Selection effect?
- Limiting pulsar period?
- Ablation with no accretion?
31DNS Systems
- Formed from high-mass binary systems
- First-born neutron star mildly recycled short
orbital period - Second SN doesnt disrupt the system but does
make it eccentric - Only one case where both NS are seen as pulsars
the Double Pulsar - Second-formed pulsar is long-period but
relatively young just as expected! - Great systems for tests of GR!
32PSR J0737-3039A/B Post-Keplerian Effects
R Mass ratio w periastron advance g
gravitational redshift r s Shapiro delay Pb
orbit decay
.
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GR is OK! Consistent at the 0.05 level!
Marta Burgay talk!
Non-radiative test distinct from PSR B191316
(Kramer et al. 2006)
33More Diversity!
- SGR/AXPs
- XDINSs
- High-B radio pulsars
- RRATs
- X-ray Gamma-ray pulsars
- SNR associations
- Binary pulsars
- Ordinary pulsars!
34Ordinary Pulsars
- Most of the known pulsars (1400)
- Great resource for studies of
- Galactic distribution and evolution of massive
stars - Supernovae neutron-star formation, kicks and
initial spin - Interactions in relativistic plasmas coherent
emission mechanisms - Neutron star interiors glitches and timing
noise - Interstellar medium free-electron densities
and inhomogeneities and Galactic magnetic fields - Precision astrometry
- Etc, etc.
35Summary
- Pulsars are a very diverse population
- single, binary, rotation-powered,
accretion-powered, magnetically-powered,
high-energy, low-energy - The P P diagram is a great tool for
distinguishing the different types of pulsar
the pulsar Hertzsprung-Russell diagram! - They are wonderful objects which have kept many
of us fascinated over a lifetime of research!
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Thank you!