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Observation Date (UT) Observation Lat

Canonical Name:Geminga Pulsar
TeVCat Name:TeV J0633+177p
Other Names:
Source Type:PSR
R.A.:06 33 54.153 (hh mm ss)
Dec.:+17 46 12.91 (dd mm ss)
Gal Long: 195.13 (deg)
Gal Lat: 4.27 (deg)
Distance: 0.25 kpc
Flux: (Crab Units)
Energy Threshold: GeV
Spectral Index:5.62
Extended:No
Discovery Date:2018-06
Discovered By: MAGIC
TeVCat SubCat:Default Catalog

Source Notes:

This detection was announced during the talk of Marcos Lopez at the
MAGIC 15th Anniversary Meeting in June 2018.
The source was moved from the "Newly Announced" to the "Default" catalogue
on 24 November 2020 with the publication of MAGIC Collaboration et al. (2020).

Source position:

The source position is taken from SIMBAD:
- R.A. (J2000): 06 33 54.153
- Dec. (J2000): +17 46 12.91

Distance:

From Faherty et al. (2007):
- "We find the parallax pi = 4.0 +/- 1.3 mas, corresponding to a
distance to Geminga of (250 -62 +120) pc, a result 60% larger than the
previously published value. The proper motion is 178.2 +/- 1.8 mas/year."
From Caraveo et al. (1996):
- "Using data from Hubble Space Telescope observations, we report the
first optical measurement of the annual parallax of a neutron star."
- "The resulting distance value is 157 pc (+59, -34), just consistent
with the lower end of the wide range derived from X-ray data. "

Age:

From the ATNF Pulsar catalog by Manchester et al. (2005):
- 3.42e+05 year (340 Myear)

Pulsar Period:

From MAGIC Collaboration et al. (2020):
- "From the two pulses per rotation seen by Fermi-LAT, only the second one,
P2, is detected in the MAGIC energy range, with a significance of 6.3 sigma"

From Abdo et al. (2010):
- "Geminga has a period of 237 ms and a very stable period derivative
of 1.1 x10e-14 s s-1, that characterize it as a mature pulsar with
characteristic age of 3 x10e5 yr and spin-down luminosity Edot = 3.26 x10e34 erg s-1"

From Mayer-Hasselwander et al. (1994):
- The EGRET data showed a double-peaked light curve with a peak
separation of approx. 0.5 phase.

Spectral Information:

From MAGIC Collaboration et al. (2020):
- Pulsed emission is detected between 15 GeV and 75 GeV
- "The spectrum measured by MAGIC is well-represented by a simple
power law of spectral index 5.62 +/- 0.54, which smoothly extends the
Fermi-LAT spectrum. A joint fit to MAGIC and Fermi-LAT data rules out
the existence of a sub-exponential cut-off in the combined energy
range at the 3.6 sigma significance level. The power-law tail emission
detected by MAGIC is interpreted as the transition from curvature
radiation to Inverse Compton Scattering of particles accelerated in
the northern outer gap."


Seen by: MAGIC
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