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We report on the analysis of a deep Chandra observation of the high-magnetic field pulsar (PSR) J1119-6127 and its compact pulsar wind nebula (PWN) taken in October 2019, three years after the source went into outburst. The 0.5-7 keV post-outburst (2019) spectrum of the pulsar is best described by a two-component blackbody plus powerlaw model with a temperature of 0.2pm0.1 keV, photon index of 1.8pm0.4 and X-ray luminosity of ~1.9e33 erg s^{-1}, consistent with its pre-burst quiescent phase. We find that the pulsar has gone back to quiescence. The compact nebula shows a jet-like morphology elongated in the north-south direction, similar to the pre-burst phase. The post-outburst PWN spectrum is best fit by an absorbed powerlaw with a photon index of 2.3pm0.5 and flux of ~3.2e-14 erg cm^{-2} s^{-1} (0.5-7 keV). The PWN spectrum shows evidence of spectral softening in the post-outburst phase, with the pre-burst photon index of 1.2pm0.4 changing to 2.3pm0.5, and pre-burst luminosity of ~1.5e32 erg s^{-1} changing to 2.7e32 erg s^{-1} in the 0.5-7 keV band, suggesting magnetar outbursts can impact PWNe. The observed timescale for returning to quiescence, of just a few years, implies a rather fast cooling process and favors a scenario where J1119 is temporarily powered by magnetic energy following the magnetar outburst, in addition to its spin-down energy.
We observed the young pulsar J1357--6429 with the {it Chandra} and {it XMM-Newton} observatories. The pulsar spectrum fits well a combination of absorbed power-law model ($Gamma=1.7pm0.6$) and blackbody model ($kT=140^{+60}_{-40}$ eV, $Rsim2$ km at t
PSR J1809-1917 is a young ($tau=51$ kyr) energetic ($dot{E}=1.8times10^{36}$ erg s$^{-1}$) radio pulsar powering an X-ray pulsar wind nebula (PWN) that exhibits morphological variability. We report on the results of a new monitoring campaign by the C
It has long been unclear if the small-scale magnetic structures on the neutron star (NS) surface could survive the fall-back episode. The study of the Hall cascade (Cumming, Arras and Zweibel 2004; Wareing and Hollerbach 2009) hinted that energy in s
We present the spin frequency and profile evolution of the radio pulsar J1119$-$6127 following magnetar-like X-ray bursts from the system in 2016 July. Using data from the Parkes radio telescope, we observe a smooth and fast spin-down process subsequ
Recent radio observations have unveiled the existence of a number of radio pulsars with spin-down derived magnetic fields in the magnetar range. However, their observational properties appears to be more similar to classical radio pulsars than to mag