We have compiled a new and complete catalog of the main properties of the 1509 pulsars for which published information currently exists. The catalog includes all spin-powered pulsars, as well as anomalous X-ray pulsars and soft gamma-ray repeaters showing coherent pulsed emission, but excludes accretion-powered systems. References are given for all data listed. We have also developed a new World Wide Web interface for accessing and displaying either tabular or plotted data with the option of selecting pulsars to be displayed via logical conditions on parameter expressions. The Web interface has an ''expert'' mode giving access to a wider range of parameters and allowing the use of custom databases. For users with locally installed software and database on Unix or Linux systems, the catalog may be accessed from a command-line interface. C-language functions to access specified parameters are also available. The catalog is updated from time to time to include new information.
We present and analyse a catalogue of 233 pulsars with proper motion measurements. The sample contains a wide variety of pulsars including recycled objects and those associated with globular clusters or supernova remnants. After taking the most precise proper motions for those pulsars for which multiple measurements are available, the majority of the proper motions (58%) are derived from pulsar timing methods, 41% using interferometers and the remaining 1% using optical telescopes. Many of the 1-D and 2-D speeds (referring to speeds measured in one coordinate only and the magnitudes of the transverse velocities respectively) derived from these measurements are somewhat lower than earlier estimates because of the use of the most recent electron density model in determining pulsar distances. The mean 1-D speeds for the normal and recycled pulsars are 152(10) and 54(6) km/s respectively. The corresponding mean 2-D speeds are 246(22) and 87(13) km/s. PSRs B2011+38 and B2224+64 have the highest inferred 2-D speeds of ~1600 km/s. We study the mean speeds for different subsamples and find that, in general, they agree with previous results. Applying a novel deconvolution technique to the sample of 73 pulsars with characteristic ages less than 3 Myr, we find the mean 3-D pulsar birth velocity to be 400(40) km/s. The distribution of velocities is well described by a Maxwellian distribution with 1-D rms sigma=265 km/s. There is no evidence for a bimodal velocity distribution. The proper motions for PSRs B1830-08 and B2334+61 are consistent with their proposed associations with the supernova remnants W41 and G114.3+0.3 respectively.Comment: 20 pages, accepted by MNRA
Contemporary pulsar‐timing experiments have reached a sensitivity level where systematic errors introduced by existing analysis procedures are limiting the achievable science. We have developed tempo2, a new pulsar‐timing package that contains propagation and other relevant effects implemented at the 1‐ns level of precision (a factor of ∼100 more precise than previously obtainable). In contrast with earlier timing packages, tempo2 is compliant with the general relativistic framework of the IAU 1991 and 2000 resolutions and hence uses the International Celestial Reference System, Barycentric Coordinate Time and up‐to‐date precession, nutation and polar motion models. tempo2 provides a generic and extensible set of tools to aid in the analysis and visualization of pulsar‐timing data. We provide an overview of the timing model, its accuracy and differences relative to earlier work. We also present a new scheme for predictive use of the timing model that removes existing processing artefacts by properly modelling the frequency dependence of pulse phase.
The double pulsar system, PSR J0737-3039A/B, is unique in that both neutron stars are detectable as radio pulsars. This, combined with significantly higher mean orbital velocities and accelerations when compared to other binary pulsars, suggested that the system would become the best available testbed for general relativity and alternative theories of gravity in the strong-field regime. 1Here we report on precision timing observations taken over the 2.5 years since its discovery and present four independent strong-field tests of general relativity. Use of the theory-independent mass ratio of the two stars makes these tests uniquely different from earlier studies. By measuring relativistic corrections to the Keplerian discription of the orbital motion, we find that the "postKeplerian" parameter s agrees with the value predicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity within an uncertainty of 0.05%, the most precise test yet obtained. We also show that the transverse velocity of the system's center of mass is extremely small. Combined with the system's location near the Sun, this result suggests that future tests of gravitational theories with the double pulsar will supersede the best current Solar-system tests. It also implies that the second-born pulsar may have formed differently to the usually assumed core-collapse of a helium star.
Pulsars are famed for their rotational clocklike stability and their highly repeatable pulse shapes. However, it has long been known that there are unexplained deviations (often termed timing noise) from the rate at which we predict these clocks should run. We show that timing behavior often results from two different spin-down rates. Pulsars switch abruptly between these states, often quasi-periodically, leading to the observed spin-down patterns. We show that for six pulsars the timing noise is correlated with changes in the pulse shape. Many pulsar phenomena, including mode changing, nulling, intermittency, pulse-shape variability, and timing noise, are therefore linked and are caused by changes in the pulsar's magnetosphere. We consider the possibility that high-precision monitoring of pulse profiles could lead to the formation of highly stable pulsar clocks.
The radio sky is relatively unexplored for transient signals, although the potential of radio-transient searches is high. This was demonstrated recently by the discovery of a previously unknown type of source, varying on timescales of minutes to hours. Here we report a search for radio sources that vary on much shorter timescales. We found eleven objects characterized by single, dispersed bursts having durations between 2 and 30ms. The average time intervals between bursts range from 4min to 3h with radio emission typically detectable for <1s per day. From an analysis of the burst arrival times, we have identified periodicities in the range 0.4-7s for ten of the eleven sources, suggesting origins in rotating neutron stars. Despite the small number of sources detected at present, their ephemeral nature implies a total Galactic population significantly exceeding that of the regularly pulsing radio pulsars. Five of the ten sources have periods >4s, and the rate of change of the pulse period has been measured for three of them; for one source, we have inferred a high magnetic field strength of 5 × 1013G. This suggests that the new population is related to other classes of isolated neutron stars observed at X-ray and γ-ray wavelengths
Gravitational waves are expected to be radiated by supermassive black hole binaries formed during galaxy mergers. A stochastic superposition of gravitational waves from all such binary systems will modulate the arrival times of pulses from radio pulsars. Using observations of millisecond pulsars obtained with the Parkes radio telescope, we constrain the characteristic amplitude of this background, A c,yr , to be < 1.0×10-15 with 95% confidence. This limit excludes predicted ranges for A c,yr from current models with 91-99.7% probability. We conclude that binary evolution is either stalled or dramatically accelerated by galactic-center environments, and that higher-cadence and shorter-wavelength observations would result in an increased sensitivity to gravitational waves.Studies of the dynamics of stars and gas in nearby galaxies provide strong evidence for the ubiquity of supermassive (> 10 6 solar mass) black holes (SMBHs) (1). Observations of luminous quasars indicate that SMBHs are hosted by galaxies throughout the history of the universe (2) and affect global properties of the host galaxies (3). The prevailing dark energycold dark matter cosmological paradigm predicts that large galaxies are assembled through the hierarchical merging of smaller galaxies. The remnants of mergers can host gravitationally bound binary SMBHs with orbits decaying through the emission of gravitational waves (GWs) (4).Gravitational waves from binary SMBHs, with periods between ~ 0.1 and 30 yr (5), can be detected or constrained by monitoring, for years to decades, a set of rapidly rotating millisecond pulsars (MSPs) distributed throughout our galaxy. Radio emission beams from MSPs are observed as pulses that can be time-tagged with as small as 20 ns precision (6). When traveling across the pulsar-Earth line of sight, GWs induce variations in the arrival times of the pulses (7).The superposition of GWs from the binary SMBH population is a stochastic background (GWB), which is typically characterized by the strain-amplitude spectrum h c (f)=A c,yr [f/(1 yr -1 )] -2/3 , where f is the GW frequency, A c,yr is the characteristic amplitude of the GWB measured at f = 1 yr -1 , predicted to be A c,yr > 10 -15 (5,(8)(9)(10)(11)(12), and -2/3 is the predicted spectral index (5,(8)(9)(10)(11)(12). The GWB will add low-frequency perturbations to pulse arrival times. While the detection of the GWB would confirm the presence of a cosmological population of binary SMBHs, limits on its amplitude constrain models of galaxy and SMBH evolution (8).As part of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array project to detect GWs (6), we have been monitoring 24 pulsars with the 64-m Parkes radio telescope. We have produced a new data set, using observations taken at a central wavelength of 10 cm and previously reported methods (6,8), that spans 11 yr, which is 3 yr longer than previous data sets analyzed at this wavelength. In addition to having greater sensitivity to the GWB because of the longer duration, the data set was improved by identifying and correc...
Using a statistically rigorous analysis method, we place limits on the existence of an isotropic stochastic gravitational wave background using pulsar timing observations. We consider backgrounds whose characteristic strain spectra may be described as a power-law dependence with frequency. Such backgrounds include an astrophysical background produced by coalescing supermassive black-hole binary systems and cosmological backgrounds due to relic gravitational waves and cosmic strings. Using the best available data, we obtain an upper limit on the energy density per unit logarithmic frequency interval of SMBH g 1/(8 yr) ½ h 2 1:9 ; 10 À8 for an astrophysical background that is 5 times more stringent than the earlier limit of 1:1 ; 10 À7 found by Kaspi and colleagues. We also provide limits on a background due to relic gravitational waves and cosmic strings of relic g 1/(8 yr) ½ h 2 2:0 ; 10 À8 and cs g 1/(8 yr)½ h 2 1:9 ; 10 À8 , respectively. All of the quoted upper limits correspond to a 0.1% false alarm rate together with a 95% detection rate. We discuss the physical implications of these results and highlight the future possibilities of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array project. We find that our current results can (1) constrain the merger rate of supermassive binary black hole systems at high redshift, (2) rule out some relationships between the black hole mass and the galactic halo mass, (3) constrain the rate of expansion in the inflationary era, and (4) provide an upper bound on the dimensionless tension of a cosmic string background.
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