5,883 research outputs found
Out of the frying pan: a young pulsar with a long radio trail emerging from SNR G315.9-0.0
The faint radio supernova remnant SNR G315.9-0.0 is notable for a long and
thin trail that extends outward perpendicular from the edge of its
approximately circular shell. In a search with the Parkes telescope we have
found a young and energetic pulsar that is located at the tip of this
collimated linear structure. PSR J1437-5959 has period P = 61 ms,
characteristic age tau_c = 114 kyr, and spin-down luminosity dE/dt = 1.4e36
erg/s. It is very faint, with a flux density at 1.4 GHz of about 75 uJy. From
its dispersion measure of 549 pc/cc, we infer d ~ 8 kpc. At this distance and
for an age comparable to tau_c, the implied pulsar velocity in the plane of the
sky is V_t = 300 km/s for a birth at the center of the SNR, although it is
possible that the SNR/pulsar system is younger than tau_c and that V_t > 300
km/s. The highly collimated linear feature is evidently the pulsar wind trail
left from the supersonic passage of PSR J1437-5959 through the interstellar
medium surrounding SNR G315.9-0.0.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Discovery of the energetic pulsar J1747-2809 in the supernova remnant G0.9+0.1
The supernova remnant G0.9+0.1 has long been inferred to contain a central
energetic pulsar. In observations with the NRAO Green Bank Telescope at 2 GHz,
we have detected radio pulsations from PSR J1747-2809. The pulsar has a
rotation period of 52 ms, and a spin-down luminosity of 4.3e37 erg/s, the
second largest among known Galactic pulsars. With a dispersion measure of 1133
pc/cc, PSR J1747-2809 is distant, at ~13 kpc according to the NE2001 electron
density model, although it could be located as close as the Galactic center.
The pulse profile is greatly scatter-broadened at a frequency of 2 GHz, so that
it is effectively undetectable at 1.4 GHz, and is very faint, with
period-averaged flux density of 40 uJy at 2 GHz.Comment: minor changes from v1 - matches published versio
Higher-order Lorentz-invariance violation, quantum gravity and fine-tuning
The issue of Lorentz fine-tuning in effective theories containing
higher-order operators is studied. To this end, we focus on the Myers-Pospelov
extension of QED with dimension-five operators in the photon sector and
standard fermions. We compute the fermion self-energy at one-loop order
considering its even and odd contributions. In the even sector we find
small radiative corrections to the usual parameters of QED which also turn to
be finite. In the odd sector the axial operator is shown to contain
unsuppressed effects of Lorentz violation leading to a possible fine-tuning. We
use dimensional regularization to deal with the divergencies and a generic
preferred four-vector. Taking the first steps in the renormalization procedure
for Lorentz violating theories we arrive to acceptable small corrections
allowing to set the bound .Comment: 11 pages, new version with the correct pole extractio
Timing of pulsars found in a deep Parkes multibeam survey
We have carried out a sensitive radio pulsar survey along the northern
Galactic plane ( and |b| \lapp 2^{\circ}) using
the Parkes 20-cm multibeam system. We observed each position for 70-min on two
separate epochs. Our analyses to date have so far resulted in the detection of
32 pulsars, of which 17 were previously unknown. Here we summarize the
observations and analysis and present the timing observations of 11 pulsars and
discovery parameters for a further 6 pulsars. We also present a timing solution
for the 166-ms bursting pulsar, PSR~J1938+2213, previously discovered during an
Arecibo drift-scan survey. Our survey data for this pulsar show that the
emission can be described by a steady pulse component with bursting emission,
which lasts for typically 20--25 pulse periods, superposed. Other new
discoveries are the young 80.1-ms pulsar PSR~J1935+2025 which exhibits a
significant amount of unmodeled low-frequency noise in its timing residuals,
and the 4.2-ms pulsar PSR~J1935+1726 which is in a low-mass binary system with
a 90.7-day circular orbit.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Polymer quantization, stability and higher-order time derivative terms
The stability of higher-order time derivative theories using the polymer
extension of quantum mechanics is studied. First, we focus on the well-known
Pais-Uhlenbeck model and by casting the theory into the sum of two decoupled
The possibility that fundamental discreteness implicit in a quantum gravity
theory may act as a natural regulator for ultraviolet singularities arising in
quantum field theory has been intensively studied. Here, along the same
expectations, we investigate whether a nonstandard representation, called
polymer representation can smooth away the large amount of negative energy that
afflicts the Hamiltonians of higher-order time derivative theories; rendering
the theory unstable when interactions come into play. We focus on the
fourth-order Pais-Uhlenbeck model which can be reexpressed as the sum of two
decoupled harmonic oscillators one producing positive energy and the other
negative energy. As expected, the Schrodinger quantization of such model leads
to the stability problem or to negative norm states called ghosts. Within the
framework of polymer quantization we show the existence of new regions where
the Hamiltonian can be defined well bounded from below.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
The Parkes multibeam pulsar survey: IV. Discovery of 180 pulsars and parameters for 281 previously known pulsars
The Parkes multibeam pulsar survey has led to the discovery of more than 700
pulsars. In this paper, we provide timing solutions, flux densities and pulse
profiles for 180 of these new discoveries. Two pulsars, PSRs J1736-2843 and
J1847-0130 have rotational periods P > 6s and are therefore among the slowest
rotating radio pulsars known. Conversely, with P = 1.8ms, PSR J1843-1113 has
the third shortest period of pulsars currently known. This pulsar and PSR
J1905+0400 (P = 3.8ms) are both solitary. We also provide orbital parameters
for a new binary system, PSR J1420-5625, which has P = 34ms, an orbital period
of 40 days and a minimum companion mass of 0.4 solar masses. The 10 degree-wide
strip along the Galactic plane that was surveyed is known to contain 264 radio
pulsars that were discovered prior to the multibeam pulsar survey. We have
redetected almost all of these pulsars and provide new dispersion measure
values and flux densities at 20cm for the redetected pulsars.Comment: 35 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS, a high quality image of
the figure on page 32 is available from
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/research/pulsar/images/pmsurvey_fig.p
A Proper Motion for the Pulsar Wind Nebula G359.23-0.82, "the Mouse," Associated with the Energetic Radio Pulsar J1747-2958
The "Mouse" (PWN G359.23-0.82) is a spectacular bow shock pulsar wind nebula,
powered by the radio pulsar J1747-2958. The pulsar and its nebula are presumed
to have a high space velocity, but their proper motions have not been directly
measured. Here we present 8.5 GHz interferometric observations of the Mouse
nebula with the Very Large Array, spanning a time baseline of 12 yr. We measure
eastward proper motion for PWN G359.23-0.82 (and hence indirectly for PSR
J1747-2958) of 12.9+/-1.8 mas/yr, which at an assumed distance of 5 kpc
corresponds to a transverse space velocity of 306+/-43 km/s. Considering
pressure balance at the apex of the bow shock, we calculate an in situ hydrogen
number density of approximately 1.0(-0.2)(+0.4) cm^(-3) for the interstellar
medium through which the system is traveling. A lower age limit for PSR
J1747-2958 of 163(-20)(+28) kyr is calculated by considering its potential
birth site. The large discrepancy with the pulsar's spin-down age of 25 kyr is
possibly explained by surface dipole magnetic field growth on a timescale ~15
kyr, suggesting possible future evolution of PSR J1747-2958 to a different
class of neutron star. We also argue that the adjacent supernova remnant
G359.1-0.5 is not physically associated with the Mouse system but is rather an
unrelated object along the line of sight.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, emulateapj format. Accepted for publication in
The Astrophysical Journa
17 and 24 GHz observations of southern pulsars
We present observations of PSRs J0437-4715, J0738-4042, J0835-4510,
J0908-4913, J1048-5832, J1622-4950, J1644-4559, J1721-3532 and J1740-3015 at 17
GHz using the Parkes radio telescope. All 9 were detected at 17 GHz,
additionally, we detected PSR J0835-4510 and J1622-4950 at 24 GHz. Polarisation
profiles of each pulsar and the variation with frequency are discussed. In
general, we find that the highly polarised edge components of young pulsars
continue to dominate their profiles at 17 GHz. Older pulsars (>10^5 years)
appear to be almost completely depolarised. Our detection of PSR J0437-4715 is
the highest frequency observation of a millisecond pulsar to date, and implies
a luminosity at 17 GHz of 14 {\mu}Jy kpc^2, and a mean spectral index of 2.2.
We find that the spectral index of the magnetar PSR J1622-4950 is flat between
1.4 and 24 GHz, similar to the other known radio magnetars XTE J1810-197 and 1E
1547.0-5408. The profile is similar to that at 3.1 GHz, and is highly linearly
polarised. Analysis of the frequency evolution of the profile of PSR J0835-4510
show that the profile is made of four components that vary with frequency only
in their amplitude. The width and separation of the components remains fixed
and the spectral index of each component can be determined independently.Comment: 10 Pages, 17 Figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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