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paper

Large Binocular Telescope observations of PSR J2043+2740

arXiv:1709.09169 · doi:10.1093/mnras/stx2512

Abstract

We present the results of deep optical imaging of the radio/$γ$-ray pulsar PSR J2043+2740, obtained with the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). With a characteristic age of 1.2 Myr, PSR J2043+2740 is one of the oldest (non recycled) pulsars detected in $γ$-rays, although with still a quite high rotational energy reservoir ($\dot{E}_{\rm rot} = 5.6 \times 10^{34}$ erg s$^{-1}$). The presumably close distance (a few hundred pc), suggested by the hydrogen column density ($N_{\rm H} \lesssim 3.6 \times 10^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$), would make it a viable target for deep optical observations, never attempted until now. We observed the pulsar with the Large Binocular Camera of the LBT. The only object (V=25.44$\pm$0.05) detected within ~3" from the pulsar radio coordinates is unrelated to it. PSR J2043+2740 is, thus, undetected down to V~26.6 (3-$σ$), the deepest limit on its optical emission. We discuss the implications of this result on the pulsar emission properties.

4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication on MNRAS