Toward an Empirical Theory of Pulsar Emission XII. Exploring the Physical Conditions in Millisecond Pulsar Emission Regions
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| Publication date | 01-08-2017 |
| Journal | Astrophysical Journal |
| Article number | 23 |
| Volume | Issue number | 845 | 1 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
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| Abstract |
The five-component profile of the 2.7 ms pulsar J0337+1715 appears to
exhibit the best example to date of a core/double-cone emission-beam
structure in a millisecond pulsar (MSP). Moreover, three other MSPs, the
binary pulsars B1913+16, B1953+29, and J1022+1001, seem to exhibit
core/single-cone profiles. These configurations are remarkable and
important because it has not been clear whether MSPs and slow pulsars
exhibit similar emission-beam configurations, given that they have
considerably smaller magnetospheric sizes and magnetic field strengths.
MSPs thus provide an extreme context for studying pulsar radio emission.
Particle currents along the magnetic polar flux tube connect processes
just above the polar cap through the radio-emission region to the
light-cylinder and the external environment. In slow pulsars,
radio-emission heights are typically about 500 km around where the
magnetic field is nearly dipolar, and estimates of the physical
conditions there point to radiation below the plasma frequency and
emission from charged solitons by the curvature process. We are able to
estimate emission heights for the four MSPs and carry out a similar
estimation of physical conditions in their much lower emission regions.
We find strong evidence that MSPs also radiate by curvature emission
from charged solitons.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa7b73 |
| Other links | http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...845...23R |
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