Plerions: the hole of the donut

plerion (‘plɪərɪən) — n, “filled” – a nebula powered by the pulsar wind of a pulsar — Wikipedia

In the second astrobite in our Supernova Remnants Series, we review (the second half of) a review article that describes Supernovae in their second phase – the Sedov-Taylor phase, and their embedded gems – pulsar wind nebulae.

Review: Stages of a Supernova
A typical supernova goes through three distinct stages:

  1. Ejecta-Dominated (see this previous astrobite)
  2. Sedov-Taylor
  3. Snowplow

Transitioning to the Sedov-Taylor Stage
As the blast wave shock slows down, ejecta run into each other at the boundary of the remnant, setting up a reverse shock that propagates back into the ejecta, heating it up once more. Electrons are accelerated in the shocked ejecta, which then radiates primarily via synchrotron radiation. Radiative cooling is still inefficient – so the remnant does not lose energy appreciably and the expansion remains energy-conserving.

The Sedov-Taylor Stage
Once the blastwave shock from the expanding outermost ejecta sweeps up several times more mass than the original mass in the ejecta itself, a new phase of evolution begins – characterized by only two dimensional parameters, the energy of the explosion, E and the density of the circumburst medium, ρ. From these two and the time since explosion, a scale-free solution results, which gives the position of the blast wave as a function of time. Observationally though, it is very hard to categorically state whether a remnant is actually in the Sedov phase (characterized by a particular expansion law, R ∝ t2/5 and the absence of the reverse shock) – in fact, since the supernova explodes into a clumpy medium, different parts of it may be in different phases at the same time.

A New Player – the Central Pulsar
Ignored in these shenanigans is the central compact object, typically a neutron star. If this neutron star has a strong magnetic field, it may be a pulsar. As the pulsar spins, the magnetic field whips around, creating a turbulent electromagnetic field that, through processes not fully understood, produces electron-positron pairs and accelerates them to high energies. The resulting wind of charged particles cocooned in toroidal magnetic field parcels slowly drains the pulsar of its rotational kinetic energy. As the wind interacts with the surrounding supernova material and later, the ISM, it produces a pulsar wind nebula (PWN, or plerion), a beautiful example of which is M1, the Crab Nebula in Taurus.

Structure of a composite supernova remnant with an embedded plerion. By Tanmoy Laskar

The Evolution of a Plerion

  1. The expansion of the PWN

    Where the wind interacts with the ejecta from the supernova that produced the pulsar, it produces a shock front, which expands outwards supersonically, with radius, Rt6/5. Inside the shock, relativistic wind particles flow freely away from the central neutron star. At the shock, the particles are scattered, their pitch angles (direction of velocity relative to the magnetic field) are randomized, and as they stream out beyond the shock, they emit synchrotron radiation. The synchrotron lifetime scales inversely with the Lorentz factor of the ultra-relativistic wind particles, whereas the peak frequency of the corresponding radiation scales proportional to the Lorentz factor – this means that high-energy X-ray radiation comes from right near the termination shock where particles are being accelerated, the optical extends a bit further out, but the entire extent of the nebula is revealed only in the radio.

    The production of jets

    The termination shock, where the pulsar wind rams into the supernova ejecta, is not always spherical – it may pinch off near the pulsar’s rotation axis. The wind particles flowing radially outward hit the shock, flow parallel to it, and get collimated into a jet at the poles by hoop stress (aka the “toothpaste effect“). This process is beautifully seen in movies of the Crab Pulsar.

  2. Hugged by the reverse shock

    This happy equilibrium ends when the reverse shock comes and hits the expanding wind nebula (typically about 7000 years after the supernova for an explosion with energy, E~1051 erg and ejecta mass, M~10M). The nebula gets squeezed and distorted by the shock (and if the pulsar is off-center from the nebula, it may pop out), and undergoes multiple compression-re-expansion events over timescales of thousands of years. The process continues until the supernova evolves into the radiative phase. The squeezing by the reverse shock also amplifies the magnetic field inside the nebula, causing synchrotron losses to skyrocket and the nebula to brighten considerably.

  3. Left: Hydrodynamic simulation of a pulsar bow shock. The pulsar (asterisk) is moving from right to left with Mach number 60. Right: Chandra image (blue) and VLA image (red) of G359.23-0.82 (the "Mouse"), the bow shock associated with PSR J1717-2958 (Gaensler et al. 2004). The white arrow indicates a structure which may be the termination shock. Credit: Reynolds et al. (2011)

  4. Runaway pulsar!
  5. Pulsars are born with significant natal kicks of up to several 1000 km/s, that set them on ballistic trajectories through the remnant. Since the expansion of the supernova remnant slows down with time due to interaction with the ISM, a pulsar with a significant space velocity will eventually escape the remnant. For a supernova in the Sedov-Taylor phase, the sound speed drops away from the center, and the pulsar’s motion will become supersonic at about 68% of the distance to the edge. At that time, the pulsar is a bullet moving through the ejected material – a bow shock forms and the system gives off intense X-rays. When the pulsar escapes the remnant completely, the bow shock is formed in the ambient ISM.

Differences between a Pulsar Wind Nebula and a Supernova Remnant
A Pulsar Wind Nebula and the Supernova Remnant it may find itself in are two distinct entities, though they often get confused in the literature. Here are some of their distinguishing features.

  1. Energy source
  2. Supernova remnants are formed from a point injection of energy, whereas pulsar wind nebula result from a steady injection of energy by the central compact object.

  3. Radio morphology, spectrum and polarization
  4. SNRs are usually limb-brightened shells of synchrotron radiation, with steep radio spectra (ν-0.3 to ν-0.8), whereas PWNe are amorphous and brightest at the location of the pulsar, with flat radio spectra (ν0 to ν-0.3). Additionally, SNRs have tangled and disordered magnetic fields, resulting in low levels of linear polarization (5%-10%), whereas PWNe have large-scale ordered magnetic fields resulting in high degrees of linear polarization (30%-50%)

Outstanding Issues : Time variability
Besides the exciting relativistic magneto-hydrodynamic problems encountered in plerions, there is the issue of time variability – several PWNe have shown variability over the time scales of months to years. The answer may lie in some flow instability. New measurements with X-ray polarimetry and high-energy studies from Fermi are likely to broaden the prospects for the study of plerions in the coming years.

What’s next
Pulsar wind nebulae are found in supernova remnants in all stages of their evolution. As far as a supernova remnant in the Sedov phase is concerned, when the cooling times in the ejecta becomes comparable to the lifetime of the remnant, it will then cool catastrophically and enter a new phase – the snowplow phase.

About Tanmoy Laskar

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