Characterization of the inner knot of the crab: The site of the gamma-ray flares?

  • Alexander Rudy
  • , Dieter Horns
  • , Andrea Deluca
  • , Jeffery Kolodziejczak
  • , Allyn Tennant
  • , Yajie Yuan
  • , Rolf Buehler
  • , Jonathon Arons
  • , Roger Blandford
  • , Patrizia Caraveo
  • , Enrico Costa
  • , Stephan Funk
  • , Elizabeth Hays
  • , Andrei Lobanov
  • , Claire Max
  • , Michael Mayer
  • , Roberto Mignani
  • , Stephen L. O'Dell
  • , Roger Romani
  • , Marco Tavani
  • Martin C. Weisskopf

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A particularly intriguing recent result from γ-ray astronomy missions is the detection of powerful flares from the Crab Nebula, which challenges the current understanding of pulsar wind nebulae and acceleration mechanisms. To search for the production site(s) of these flares, we conducted a multi-wavelength observing campaign using Keck, the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and the Chandra X-ray Observatory. As the short timescales of the γ-ray flares ( day) suggest a small emitting region, the Crab's inner knot (about 0.6 arcsec from the pulsar) is a candidate site for such flaring. This paper describes observations of the inner knot, seeking to understand its nature and possible relationship with γ-ray flares. Using singular-value decomposition, analysis of the HST images yielded results consistent with traditional methods while substantially reducing some uncertainties. These analyses show that the knot's intrinsic properties (especially size and brightness) are correlated with its (projected) separation from the pulsar. This characterization of the inner knot helps in constraining standard shock model parameters, under the assumption that the knot lies near the shocked surface. While the standard shock model gives good agreement in several respects, two puzzles persist: (a) the observed angular size of the knot relative to the pulsar-knot separation is much smaller than expected; and (b) the variable high degree of polarization (reported by others) is difficult to reconcile with a highly relativistic downstream flow. However, the IR-optical flux of the inner knot is marginally consistent with the shock accelerating most of the Nebula's optical-emitting particles.

Original languageEnglish
Article number24
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume811
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 20 2015

Keywords

  • ISM: jets and outflows
  • ISM: supernova remnants
  • pulsars: individual (Crab)
  • techniques: image processing

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