Title: Neutron Stars and Debris Disks
1Neutron Stars and Debris Disks
- Andy Shearer and Vitaly Neustroev
- Centre for Astronomy
- NUI, Galway
- Ireland
2Debris Disks and Pulsar Theory
- Underlying pulsar theory unchanged for 40 years
- rapidly rotating magnetised neutron star
- radio energy emission - coherent synchrotron
- high energy emission - incoherent synchrotron or
curvature radiation - No agreement on how.
- Probably the only point of agreement between all
these theories is the association of pulsars with
magnetized, rotating neutron stars - Lyutikov,
M., Blandford, R., Machabeli, G., 1999, MNRAS,
305, 338 - Understanding now helped by
- Rotating Radio Transients - RRATs
- AXPs
- Transient pulsars and transient phenomena
- .....
3Some Background
- Pulsar-disk systems have been proposed for over
25 years - Debris Disks - either
- fossil disk created during the supernova event
- Michel Dessler, 1981, ApJ, 251, 654, Pulsar
Disk System - Michel, Nature, 1988, 333, 644, Neutron star
disk formation from supernova fall-back and
possible observational consequences - continually fed from the ISM
- e.g. Popov, Colpi, Treves, Turolla, Lipunov,
Prokhorov, 2000, ApJ, 530, 896 - pulsar planetary system first discovered in 1992
- and to date the lowest mass planet - Wolszczan, A. Frail, D. A., 1992, Nature, 355,
145
4Some more background - Spin History
But n2.4 - PSR B0540-69 1.4 - Vela
2.51 - Crab 2.91 PSR J1119-6127 2.837
PSR B1509-58
Additional torque from a fall-back disk Menou,
Perna Hernquist, ApJ, L63, 554 (2001) Mass in
flow 10-6 M? / year for the Crab But requires
limitations on the radial extent of the disk to
avoid optical detection
An additional source of torque for Vela? Possibly
a fall-back/debris disk?
5First observation of a neutron star disk - AXP-
4U 014261
unpulsed
Wang et al, 2006, Nature, 440, 772
Pulsed
UltraCam observations - Dhillon et al, MNRAS,
363, 609, 2005
6Other evidence for debris disks?
Shibanov, Y. A, et al, 2006, AA, 448, 313
7(No Transcript)
8Not a new idea ... Perna, Hernquist Narayan,
2000, ApJ, 54, 344
9Spitzer - NICMOS - Subaru Image PSR
B065615 Spitzer 3.6µm
Spitzer 5.8µm
Subaru B
NICMOS 160W
Subaru -Shibanov et al., AA, 448, 313
(2006) Nicmos - Koptsevich et al, AA., 370, 1004
(2001) Spitzer - Spitzer archive.
10Predicted Debris Disk Fluxes for Normal
Pulsars rinner light cylinder
radius router1R?
11Rotating RAdio Transients - RRATs
Transient phenomena - Debris Disk hints?
- To date 10 pulsars show transient behaviour
- McLaughlin et al, Nature, 2006, 439, 817
- At least one with an X-ray counterpart
- Reynolds et al, 2006, ApJ, 639, L71
- Accreting material triggering magneto-spheric
activity? - Li, 2006, ApJ, 646, L139, also PSR B193124
12Other stochastic emitters - Giant Radio
PulseGRPs Pulsars
- A few pulsars emit GRPs where the randomly
occurring pulses have a flux many thousand times
greater than the normal
13Ground based AO Observations
arXiv0712.4171v2
Possible interpretations X-ray heated fossil
debris disk Viscously heated disk
14Summary - why near IR observations are important
- At least one young neutron star, 4U 014261, has
been observed to have a debris-disk, but - how many others do?
- how long does a disk last?
- are such disks suitable for planet formation?
- disks or rings?
- How many young normal pulsars have associated
debris disks? - t lt 100,000 years Vela, Crab ......
- middle aged pulsars - PSR B065614, Geminga,
- Can debris disks explain
- Stochastic pulsar behaviour?
- Spin evolution and birth spin period?
15Summary - Why SM4 will be important
- ACS
- Visible polarisation
- WFC3
- NIR imaging for 0.1µJy fluxes
- NICMOS
- NIR imaging and polarimetry
- compare LONG and SHORT polarisation fluxes
- Observations at 2 microns
- Need multi-wavelength studies
- X-Ray - IR variability for AXP disks
- WFC3 and ground based adaptive optic observations
ELTs