New observations of the pulsar wind nebula in the supernova remnant CTB 80 |
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Authors: | T. A. Lozinskaya V. N. Komarova A. V. Moiseev S. I. Blinnikov |
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Affiliation: | (1) Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Universitetskii pr. 13, Moscow, 119992, Russia;(2) Special Astrophysical Observatory, Russian Academy of Sciences, Nizhnii Arkhyz, 357147 Karachai-Cherkessian Republic, Russia;(3) Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics, ul. Bol’shaya Cheremushkinskaya 25, Moscow, 117259, Russia |
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Abstract: | We investigated the kinematics of the pulsar wind nebula (PWN) in the old supernova remnant CTB 80 using the Fabry-Perot interferometer of the 6-m Special Astrophysical Observatory telescope. In addition to the previously known expansion of the system of bright filaments with a velocity of 100–200 km s?1, we detected weak high-velocity features in the Hα line at least up to velocities of 400–450 km s?1. We analyzed the morphology of the PWN in the Hα, [S II], and [O III] lines using HST archival data and discuss its nature. The shape of the central filamentary shell, which is determined by the emission in the [O III] line and in the radio continuum, is shown to be consistent with the bow-shock model for a significant (about 60°) inclination of the pulsar’s velocity vector to the plane of the sky. In this case, the space velocity of the pulsar is twice as high as its tangential velocity, i.e., it reaches ?500 km s?1, and PSR B1951+32 is the first pulsar whose radial velocity about 40 km s?1 has been estimated from PWN observations. The shell-like Hα-structures outside the bow shock front in the east and the west could be associated with both the pulsar’s jets and the pulsar wind breakthrough due to the layered structure of the extended CTB 80 shell. |
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Keywords: | supernovae and supernova remnants pulsar wind nebulae models |
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