Litcius/Paper detail

Pulsar wind nebulae of runaway massive stars

D M-A Meyer, Z. Méliani

2022Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT A significant fraction of massive stars move at speed through the interstellar medium of galaxies. After their death as core-collapse supernovae, a possible final evolutionary state is that of a fast-rotating magnetized neutron star, shaping its circumstellar medium into a pulsar wind nebula. Understanding the properties of pulsar wind nebulae requires knowledge of the evolutionary history of their massive progenitors. Using two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical simulations, we demonstrate that, in the context of a runaway high-mass red-supergiant supernova progenitor, the morphology of its subsequent pulsar wind nebula is strongly affected by the wind of the defunct progenitor star pre-shaping the stellar surroundings throughout its entire past life. In particular, pulsar wind nebulae of obscured runaway massive stars harbour asymmetries as a function of the morphology of the progenitor’s wind-blown cavity, inducing projected asymmetric up–down synchrotron emission.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsPulsarAstrophysicsAstronomyNebulaSupernovaStarsSupergiantNeutron starInterstellar mediumPlanetary nebulaContext (archaeology)GalaxyBiologyPaleontologyStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesGamma-ray bursts and supernovaePulsars and Gravitational Waves Research