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arxiv: astro-ph/0009270 · v1 · submitted 2000-09-18 · 🌌 astro-ph

Reconnection in a striped pulsar wind

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords windfluxreconnectionpoyntingpulsarshockcasedominated
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It is generally thought that most of the spin-down power of a pulsar is carried away in an MHD wind dominated by Poynting flux. In the case of an oblique rotator, a significant part of this energy can be considered to be in a low-frequency wave, consisting of stripes of toroidal magnetic field of alternating polarity, propagating in a region around the equatorial plane. Magnetic reconnection in such a structure has been proposed as a mechanism for transforming the Poynting flux into particle energy in the pulsar wind. We have re-examined this process and conclude that the wind accelerates significantly in the course of reconnection. This dilates the timescale over which the reconnection process operates, so that the wind requires a much larger distance than was previously thought in order to convert the Poynting flux to particle flux. In the case of the Crab, the wind is still Poynting-dominated at the radius at which a standing shock is inferred from observation. An estimate of the radius of the termination shock for other pulsars implies that all except the milli-second pulsars have Poynting-flux dominated winds all the way out to the shock front.

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