Constraining the Evolutionary Fate of Central Compact Objects: "Old" Radio Pulsars in Supernova Remnants

Kaspi, Victoria M.; Bogdanov, Slavko; Ng, C. -Y.

United States, Hong Kong SAR, Canada

Abstract

Central compact objects (CCOs) constitute a population of radio-quiet, slowly spinning (>=100 ms) young neutron stars with anomalously high thermal X-ray luminosities. Their spin-down properties imply weak dipole magnetic fields (~1010-11 G) and characteristic ages much greater than the ages of their host supernova remnants (SNRs). However, CCOs may posses strong "hidden" internal magnetic fields that may re-emerge on timescales of gsim10 kyr, with the neutron star possibly activating as a radio pulsar in the process. This suggests that the immediate descendants of CCOs may be masquerading as slowly spinning "old" radio pulsars. We present an X-ray survey of all ordinary radio pulsars within 6 kpc that are positionally coincident with Galactic SNRs in order to test the possible connection between the supposedly old but possibly very young pulsars and the SNRs. None of the targets exhibit anomalously high thermal X-ray luminosities, suggesting that they are genuine old ordinary pulsars unrelated to the superposed SNRs. This implies that CCOs are either latent radio pulsars that activate long after their SNRs dissipate or they remain permanently radio-quiet. The true descendants of CCOs remain at large.

2014 The Astrophysical Journal
XMM-Newton 19