We investigate the number and type of pulsars that will be discovered with
the low-frequency radio telescope LOFAR. We consider different search
strategies for the Galaxy, for globular clusters and for galaxies other than
our own. We show an all-sky Galactic survey can be optimally carried out by
incoherently combining the LOFAR stations. In a 60-day all-sky Galactic survey
LOFAR can find over a thousand pulsars, probing the local pulsar population to
a very deep luminosity limit. For targets of smaller angular size, globular
clusters and galaxies, the LOFAR stations can be combined coherently, making
use of the full sensitivity. Searches of nearby northern-sky globular clusters
can find large numbers of low luminosity millisecond pulsars (eg. over 10 new
millisecond pulsars in a 10-hour observation of M15). If the pulsar population
in nearby galaxies is similar to that of the Milky Way, a 10-hour observation
could find the 10 brightest pulsars in M33, or pulsars in other galaxies out to
a distance of 1.2Mpc.Comment: Proceedings of "40 Years of Pulsars: Millisecond Pulsars, Magnetars,
and More" (12-17 August 2007 at McGill, Montreal Canada