Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 X-ray polarimetry: historical remarks and other considerations
- Part I Polarimetry techniques
- Part II Polarized emission in X-ray sources
- 14 Probing strong gravity effects with X-ray polarimetry
- 15 X-ray polarization from black holes in the thermal state
- 16 Strong-gravity effects acting on polarization from orbiting spots
- 17 Polarization of thermal emission from accreting black holes
- 18 X-ray polarimetry and radio-quiet AGN
- 19 The soft X-ray polarization in obscured AGN
- 20 The polarization of complex X-ray sources
- 21 Polarization of Compton X-rays from jets in AGN
- 22 Polarization of X-ray lines from galaxy clusters and elliptical galaxies
- 23 Polarization characteristics of rotation-powered pulsars
- 24 Polarized X-rays from magnetized neutron stars
- 25 Polarization properties of X-ray millisecond pulsars
- 26 X-ray polarization signatures of neutron stars
- 27 Polarization from the oscillating magnetized accretion torus
- 28 X-ray polarization from accreting white dwarfs and associated systems
- 29 Polarization of pulsar wind nebulae
- 30 X-ray polarization of gamma-ray bursts
- 31 Central engine afterglow from GRBs and the polarization signature
- 32 GRB afterglow polarimetry past, present and future
- 33 Gamma-ray polarimetry with SPI
- 34 INTEGRAL/IBIS observations of the Crab nebula and GRB 041219A polarization
- 35 Fermi results on the origin of high-energy emission in pulsars
- 36 Diagnostics of the evolution of spiral galaxies in a cluster environment
- Part III Future missions
- Author index
- Subject index
29 - Polarization of pulsar wind nebulae
from Part II - Polarized emission in X-ray sources
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 X-ray polarimetry: historical remarks and other considerations
- Part I Polarimetry techniques
- Part II Polarized emission in X-ray sources
- 14 Probing strong gravity effects with X-ray polarimetry
- 15 X-ray polarization from black holes in the thermal state
- 16 Strong-gravity effects acting on polarization from orbiting spots
- 17 Polarization of thermal emission from accreting black holes
- 18 X-ray polarimetry and radio-quiet AGN
- 19 The soft X-ray polarization in obscured AGN
- 20 The polarization of complex X-ray sources
- 21 Polarization of Compton X-rays from jets in AGN
- 22 Polarization of X-ray lines from galaxy clusters and elliptical galaxies
- 23 Polarization characteristics of rotation-powered pulsars
- 24 Polarized X-rays from magnetized neutron stars
- 25 Polarization properties of X-ray millisecond pulsars
- 26 X-ray polarization signatures of neutron stars
- 27 Polarization from the oscillating magnetized accretion torus
- 28 X-ray polarization from accreting white dwarfs and associated systems
- 29 Polarization of pulsar wind nebulae
- 30 X-ray polarization of gamma-ray bursts
- 31 Central engine afterglow from GRBs and the polarization signature
- 32 GRB afterglow polarimetry past, present and future
- 33 Gamma-ray polarimetry with SPI
- 34 INTEGRAL/IBIS observations of the Crab nebula and GRB 041219A polarization
- 35 Fermi results on the origin of high-energy emission in pulsars
- 36 Diagnostics of the evolution of spiral galaxies in a cluster environment
- Part III Future missions
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) were the first objects where non-thermal polarized synchrotron emission was detected. They are one of the best astrophysical labs available for the study of high-energy processes like particle acceleration, properties of relativistic outflows, and non-thermal emission. Their broad-band spectrum makes them a suitable target for many instruments, and to date they are the only objects for which there is clear and undisputed evidence for high-energy X-ray polarized emission. In recent years a canonical model has been established which has proved incredibly successful in explaining many of the observed features. All of this makes PWNe a prime candidate for any future X-ray polarimetry study. I will review here the current MHD model, what we know from polarization in the optical and radio band, and what we might learn from next-generation polarimetry.
Introduction
Pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) are bubbles of relativistic particles and magnetic field created when the ultra-relativistic wind from a pulsar interacts with the ambient medium, either SNR or ISM. The prototype, and the best studied of this entire class of objects, is the Crab Nebula. The canonical model of PWNe was first presented by Rees & Gunn, developed by Kennel & Coroniti, and is based on a relativistic MHD description. The pulsar wind is confined inside the SNR, and slowed down to non-relativistic speeds in a strong termination shock (TS).
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- X-ray PolarimetryA New Window in Astrophysics, pp. 195 - 201Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010