16 research outputs found
Profile instabilities of the millisecond pulsar PSR J1022+1001
We present evidence that the integrated profiles of some millisecond pulsars
exhibit severe changes that are inconsistent with the moding phenomenon as
known from slowly rotating pulsars. We study these profile instabilities in
particular for PSR J1022+1001 and show that they occur smoothly, exhibiting
longer time constants than those associated with moding. In addition, the
profile changes of this pulsar seem to be associated with a relatively
narrow-band variation of the pulse shape. Only parts of the integrated profile
participate in this process which suggests that the origin of this phenomenon
is intrinsic to the pulsar magnetosphere and unrelated to the interstellar
medium. A polarization study rules out profile changes due to geometrical
effects produced by any sort of precession. However, changes are observed in
the circularly polarized radiation component. In total we identify four
recycled pulsars which also exhibit instabilities in the total power or
polarization profiles due to an unknown phenomenon (PSRs J1022+1001,
J1730-2304, B1821-24, J2145-0750).
The consequences for high precision pulsar timing are discussed in view of
the standard assumption that the integrated profiles of millisecond pulsars are
stable. As a result we present a new method to determine pulse times-of-arrival
that involves an adjustment of relative component amplitudes of the template
profile. Applying this method to PSR J1022+1001, we obtain an improved timing
solution with a proper motion measurement of -17 \pm 2 mas/yr in ecliptic
longitude. Assuming a distance to the pulsar as inferred from the dispersion
measure this corresponds to an one-dimensional space velocity of 50 km/s.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Simultaneous Dual Frequency Observations of Giant Pulses from the Crab Pulsar
Simultaneous measurements of giant pulses from the Crab pulsar were taken at
two widely spaced frequencies using the real-time detection of a giant pulse at
1.4 GHz at the Very Large Array to trigger the observation of that same pulse
at 0.6 GHz at a 25-m telescope in Green Bank, WV. Interstellar dispersion of
the signals provided the necessary time to communicate the trigger across the
country via the Internet. About 70% of the pulses are seen at both 1.4 GHz and
0.6 GHz, implying an emission mechanism bandwidth of at least 0.8 GHz at 1 GHz
for pulse structure on time scales of one to ten microseconds.
The arrival times at both frequencies display a jitter of 100 microseconds
within the window defined by the average main pulse profile and are tightly
correlated. This tight correlation places limits on both the emission mechanism
and on frequency dependent propagation within the magnetosphere.
At 1.4 GHz the giant pulses are resolved into several, closely spaced
components. Simultaneous observations at 1.4 GHz and 4.9 GHz show that the
component splitting is frequency independent. We conclude that the multiplicity
of components is intrinsic to the emission from the pulsar, and reject the
hypothesis that this is the result of multiple imaging as the signal propagates
through the perturbed thermal plasma in the surrounding nebula. At both 1.4 GHz
and 0.6 GHz the pulses are characterized by a fast rise time and an exponential
decay time which are correlated. The pulse broadening with its exponential
decay form is most likely the result of multipath propagation in intervening
ionized gas.Comment: LaTeX, 18 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa