Volume 384, Issue 4 pp. 1638-1648

How rapidly do neutron stars spin at birth? Constraints from archival X-ray observations of extragalactic supernovae

Rosalba Perna

Corresponding Author

Rosalba Perna

JILA and Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA

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Roberto Soria

Roberto Soria

MSSL, University College London, Holmbury St Mary, Dorking RH5 6NT

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Dave Pooley

Dave Pooley

Astronomy Department, University of Wisconsin–Madison, 475 North Charter Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA

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Luigi Stella

Luigi Stella

INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, Via Frascati 33, I-00040 Rome, Italy

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First published: 07 February 2008
Citations: 1

ABSTRACT

Traditionally, studies aimed at inferring the distribution of birth periods of neutron stars are based on radio surveys. Here we propose an independent method to constrain the pulsar spin periods at birth based on their X-ray luminosities. In particular, the observed luminosity distribution of supernovae (SNe) poses a constraint on the initial rotational energy of the embedded pulsars, via the inline image correlation found for radio pulsars, and under the assumption that this relation continues to hold beyond the observed range. We have extracted X-ray luminosities (or limits) for a large sample of historical SNe observed with Chandra, XMM and Swift, which have been firmly classified as core-collapse SNe. We have then compared these observational limits with the results of Monte Carlo simulations of the pulsar X-ray luminosity distribution for a range of values of the birth parameters. We find that a pulsar population dominated by millisecond periods at birth is ruled out by the data.

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