2015
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv508
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A study of multifrequency polarization pulse profiles of millisecond pulsars

Abstract: We present high signal-to-noise ratio, multi-frequency polarization pulse profiles for 24 millisecond pulsars that are being observed as part of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA) project. The pulsars are observed in three bands, centred close to 730, 1400 and 3100 MHz, using a dual-band 10 cm/50 cm receiver and the central beam of the 20 cm multibeam receiver. Observations spanning approximately six years have been carefully calibrated and summed to produce high S/N profiles. This allows us to study the in… Show more

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Cited by 150 publications
(243 citation statements)
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“…In Jones (2016) we have referred to the paper of Karastergiou & Johnston (2006) as a consequence of the number of pulsar integrated profiles observed, the signal-to-noise ration and the time resolution in that work. But the crucial feature of the circular polarization can also be seen in the papers of Han et al (1998) and of Yan et al (2011) and Dai et al (2015) on MSP. The assumptions made here are minimal.…”
Section: Circular Polarizationmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…In Jones (2016) we have referred to the paper of Karastergiou & Johnston (2006) as a consequence of the number of pulsar integrated profiles observed, the signal-to-noise ration and the time resolution in that work. But the crucial feature of the circular polarization can also be seen in the papers of Han et al (1998) and of Yan et al (2011) and Dai et al (2015) on MSP. The assumptions made here are minimal.…”
Section: Circular Polarizationmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…Fig. 2 shows that the trailing central component 2 has a steeper spectrum than the leading component 1 and that the component separation is essentially independent of frequency (cf., Dai et al 2015). At 8.6 GHz the center components are more dominant and the side components (around 140…”
Section: Observational Resultsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…For most millisecond pulsars (e.g., Dai et al 2015), including PSR J0437−4715 described in §3, and some other pulsars with wide profiles, e.g., PSR J0953+0755 (B0950+08) also described in §3, the observed component separation is frequency independent. For these pulsars the emission region may be close to the light cylinder and caustic effects may be important in defining the observed profile shape (Ravi et al 2010), thereby negating the effects of radius-to-frequency mapping and providing an alternative explanation for frequency-independent component separations.…”
Section: Frequency Dependence Of Profile Widthsmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…While PSR J1909−3744 is also known to have an interpulse (eg., Dai et al 2015), as it is extremely weak we do not consider it in the profile model.…”
Section: A Profile Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%