SIMBAD references

1999ApJ...517..460S - Astrophys. J., 517, 460-471 (1999/May-3)

Simultaneous dual-frequency observations of giant pulses from the Crab pulsar.

SALLMEN S., BACKER D.C., HANKINS T.H., MOFFETT D. and LUNDGREN S.

Abstract (from CDS):

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 and 0.6 GHz, implying an emission mechanism bandwidth of at least 0.8 GHz at 1 GHz for pulse structure on timescales of 1 to 10 µs. The giant pulse spectral indices fall between -2.2 and -4.9, which may be compared to the average main pulse value for this pulsar of -3.0. The arrival times at both frequencies display a jitter of 100 µs 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 the 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 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 and 0.6 GHz, the pulses are characterized by a fast rise time and an exponential decay time that are correlated. At 0.6 GHz, the rise time is not resolved. The rise and fall times of the 1.4 GHz components vary from component to component and from pulse to pulse. The pulse broadening, with its exponential decay form, is most likely the result of multipath propagation in intervening ionized gas. These decay times, and that seen in contemporaneous 0.3 GHz average pulse data, are large compared to normal conditions for the Crab pulsar. The most likely location for the perturbed plasma is the interface region between the pulsar-driven synchrotron nebula and the overlying supernova ejecta.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): pulsars: individual (Crab Pulsar) - Radiation Mechanisms: Nonthermal - Scattering - ISM: Supernova Remnants

Simbad objects: 4

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