http://arxiv.org/abs/1806.09779
The structure of force-free, steady and axisymmetric magnetosphere of a neutron star (NS) is governed by the Grad-Shafranov (GS) equation, which is a second-order differential equation but degrades to first-order on the light surface (LS). The key to numerically solving the GS equation is to enable magnetic field lines smoothly cross the LS, and crossing a straight LS in flat spacetime has been a well-studied problem. But the numerical algorithm implementation becomes complicate in the presence of a bent LS, e.g. in curved spacetime, since there is no suitable computation grid adapted to it. We propose to circumvent this grid-LS mismatch problem by introducing a new coordinate frame designed such that the LS in it is a straight line. As an application, we investigate the general relativistic (GR) effect in magnetosphere structure of rapidly rotating pulsars in detail, where the LS is bent towards the central NS. We split the GR effect into two parts, curvature and frame-dragging; measure each of them and examine their dependence on the NS mass and the angular velocity for pulsars embedded in aligned dipole and multipole magnetic fields. Qualitatively speaking, we find that the curvature effect compactifies the magnetic field lines near the NS, therefore reduces the open magnetic flux and the Poynting luminosity, while the frame-dragging effect contributes a minor part in shaping the magnetosphere structure but plays a role in enhancing the spacelike current generation.
L. Huang, Z. Pan and C. Yu
Wed, 27 Jun 18
31/54
Comments: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted by MNRAS
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