X-rays from radio pulsars - The portable supernova remnants
Abstract
Neutron stars are the longest-lived remnants of supernova explosions. As a reservoir of thermal energy remaining from the explosion and generated by frictional coupling between core and crust, as a storehouse of magnetic and rotational kinetic energy which allows the star to act as a high energy particle accelerator, and as the source of a deep gravitational potential which can generate heat from infalling matter, neutron stars remain capable of producing high energy radiation for a Hubble time. The results of an extensive survey of supernova remnants and radio pulsars performed with the imaging instruments on board the Einstein Observatory are reviewed and the implications of these results for pulsar physics and for the origin and evolution of galactic neutron stars are discussed.
- Publication:
-
Supernova Remnants and their X-ray Emission
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983IAUS..101..471H
- Keywords:
-
- Neutron Stars;
- Pulsars;
- Stellar Evolution;
- Supernova Remnants;
- X Ray Astronomy;
- Heao 2;
- Magnetospheres;
- Nebulae;
- Stellar Luminosity;
- Synchrotron Radiation;
- Astrophysics