Hubble Space Telescope Nondetection of PSR J2144-3933: The Coldest Known Neutron Star

Guillot S.; Pavlov G.G.; Reyes C.; Reisenegger A.; Rodriguez L.E.; Rangelov B.; Kargaltsev O.

Abstract

We report nondetections of the similar to 3 x 10(8) yr old, slow, isolated, rotation-powered pulsar PSR J2144-3933 in observations with the Hubble Space Telescope in one optical band (F475X) and two far-ultraviolet bands (F125LP and F140LP), yielding upper bounds F-F475X < 22.7 nJy, F-F125LP < 5.9 nJy, and F-F140LP < 19.5 nJy, at the pivot wavelengths 4940 angstrom, 1438 angstrom and 1528 angstrom, respectively. Assuming a blackbody spectrum, we deduce a conservative upper bound on the surface (unredshifted) temperature of the pulsar of T < 42,000 K. This makes PSR J2144-3933 the coldest known neutron star, allowing us to study thermal evolution models of old neutron stars. This temperature is consistent with models with either direct or modified Urca reactions including rotochemical heating, and, considering frictional heating from the motion of neutron vortex lines, it puts an upper bound on the excess angular momentum in the neutron superfluid, J < 10(44) erg s.

Más información

Título según WOS: Hubble Space Telescope Nondetection of PSR J2144-3933: The Coldest Known Neutron Star
Título según SCOPUS: Hubble Space Telescope Nondetection of PSR J2144-3933: The Coldest Known Neutron Star
Título de la Revista: ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volumen: 874
Número: 2
Editorial: IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.3847/1538-4357/ab0f38

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS