Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Mallory

1st Abstract

Title (1st Abstract)

What Can Redbacks and Black Widows Teach Us About Pulsar Winds?

First Author

Mallory S. E. Roberts

Affiliation

New York University Abu Dhabi

Additional Authors

Hind Al Noori
Maura McLaughlin
Jason Hessels
Rene Breton

Presentation options

Poster

Session

4. Magnetic fields in SNRs and PWNe

1st Abstract

Redbacks and Black Widows are close binary systems where the wind from a millisecond pulsar is forced to shock at $sim 10^4$ light cylinder radii rather than the more typical $10^8$ of pulsar wind nebulae. This means they can potentially probe $sigma$ in a region very different than a PWN termination shock. It is also the case that the primary shock is likely limited to a region very near the companion star, and hence only near the equatorial plane of the pulsar wind. X-ray observations of these systems show a variety of orbitally dependent behavior. Sometimes the emission is very inefficient, but in some cases it is extremely efficient. This suggests the shock must be taking place in a magnetic field of several Gauss and that most of the pulsar spin-down power comes out as an equatorially concentrated wind. However, the interpretation is complicated by a potentially significant role for the magnetic field of the companion. I will present an overview of the multiwavelength observations of these systems as well as new NuStar data on one particularly interesting system, PSR J2129-0429, and discuss the implications for pulsar winds.