Properties of a hypothetical cold pulsar wind in LS~5039
Autor: | Bosch-Ramon, V. |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | A&A 645, A86 (2021) |
Druh dokumentu: | Working Paper |
DOI: | 10.1051/0004-6361/202039666 |
Popis: | LS~5039 is a powerful gamma-ray binary that probably hosts a non-accreting pulsar. Despite the wealth of data available, the power source of the non-thermal emitter is still unknown. We use a dynamical-radiative numerical model and multiwavelength data to constrain the properties of a pulsar wind that may power the non-thermal emitter in LS~5039. We ran simulations of an ultrarelativistic (low-$B$) cold $e^\pm$-wind that Compton scatters stellar photons and that dynamically interacts with the stellar wind. The effects of energy losses on the unshocked $e^\pm$-wind dynamics, and the geometry of the two-wind contact discontinuity, are computed for different wind models. The predicted unshocked $e^\pm$-wind radiation at periastron, when expected to be highest, is compared to LS~5039 data. The minimum possible radiation from an isotropic cold $e^\pm$-wind overpredicts the X-ray to gamma-ray fluxes at periastron by a factor of $\sim 3$. In the anisotropic wind case X-ray and $\gtrsim 100$ MeV data are not violated by wind radiation if the wind axis is at $\lesssim 20-40^\circ$ from the line of sight (probability of $\lesssim 6-24$\%), depending on the anisotropic wind model, or if the wind Lorentz factor $\in 10^2-10^3$, in which case the wind power can be higher, but it requires $e^\pm$-multiplicities of $\sim 10^6$ and $10^9$ for a $10^{-2}$~s and 10~s pulsar period, respectively. The studied model predicts that a low-$B$ cold pulsar $e^\pm$-wind in LS~5039 should be strongly anisotropic, with either a wind Lorentz factor $\in 10^2-10^3$ and very high multiplicities or with a fine-tuned wind orientation. A low-$B$, cold baryon-dominated wind would be possible, but then the multiplicities should be rather low, while the baryon-to-$e^\pm$ energy transfer should be very efficient at wind termination. A strongly magnetized cold wind seems to be the most favorable (least constrained) option. Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, version after proofs, published in Astronomy and Astrophysics (abstract abridged), Eq. 10 corrected |
Databáze: | arXiv |
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