2018AJ....156..190S -
Astron. J., 156, 190-190 (2018/November-0)
On-the-fly mapping of new pulsars.
SWIGGUM J.K. and GENTILE P.A.
Abstract (from CDS):
Current single-dish, low-frequency radio pulsar surveys provide efficient sky coverage, but poor localization of new discoveries. Here, we describe a practical technique for rapidly localizing pulsars discovered in these surveys with on-the-fly mapping and provide code to facilitate and formalize its implementation. As a proof of concept, we alter the positions of four test sources and use the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) 350 MHz receiver to recover source positions within ≃1'-3' of their true values, compared to an 18' error radius for new discoveries. Achieving similar precision with a traditional gridding strategy using the GBT requires 2-3 times as much telescope time (including overhead), multiple receivers, and relies on assumptions about the pulsars' spectral indices. For one of our test sources (PSR J1400-1431), this method revealed a discrepancy with the initial, published position, prompting additional follow-up and an improved timing solution. Rapid localization is important for improving data quality and providing flexibility in choice of center frequency for future timing observations-both of which facilitate evaluating new millisecond pulsars for potential inclusion in pulsar timing arrays.
Abstract Copyright:
© 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Journal keyword(s):
methods: data analysis - pulsars: general
Simbad objects:
4
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