Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?

We report the detection of pulsed gamma-ray emission from the fast millisecond pulsars (MSPs) B1937+21 (also known as J1939+2134) and B1957+20 (J1959+2048) using 18 months of survey data recorded by the Fermi Large Area Telescope and timing solutions based on radio observations conducted at the West...

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Main Authors: Guillemot, L., Johnson, T., Venter, C., Kerr, M., Pancrazi, B., Livingstone, M., Janssen, G., Jaroenjittichai, P., Kramer, M., Cognard, I., Stappers, B., Harding, A., Camilo, F., Espinoza, C., Freire, P., Gargano, F., Grove, J., Johnston, S., Michelson, P., Noutsos, A., Parent, D., Ransom, S., Ray, P., Shannon, Ryan, Smith, D., Theureau, G., Thorsett, S., Webb, N.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14937
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author Guillemot, L.
Johnson, T.
Venter, C.
Kerr, M.
Pancrazi, B.
Livingstone, M.
Janssen, G.
Jaroenjittichai, P.
Kramer, M.
Cognard, I.
Stappers, B.
Harding, A.
Camilo, F.
Espinoza, C.
Freire, P.
Gargano, F.
Grove, J.
Johnston, S.
Michelson, P.
Noutsos, A.
Parent, D.
Ransom, S.
Ray, P.
Shannon, Ryan
Smith, D.
Theureau, G.
Thorsett, S.
Webb, N.
author_facet Guillemot, L.
Johnson, T.
Venter, C.
Kerr, M.
Pancrazi, B.
Livingstone, M.
Janssen, G.
Jaroenjittichai, P.
Kramer, M.
Cognard, I.
Stappers, B.
Harding, A.
Camilo, F.
Espinoza, C.
Freire, P.
Gargano, F.
Grove, J.
Johnston, S.
Michelson, P.
Noutsos, A.
Parent, D.
Ransom, S.
Ray, P.
Shannon, Ryan
Smith, D.
Theureau, G.
Thorsett, S.
Webb, N.
author_sort Guillemot, L.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We report the detection of pulsed gamma-ray emission from the fast millisecond pulsars (MSPs) B1937+21 (also known as J1939+2134) and B1957+20 (J1959+2048) using 18 months of survey data recorded by the Fermi Large Area Telescope and timing solutions based on radio observations conducted at the Westerbork and Nançay radio telescopes. In addition, we analyzed archival Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer and XMM-Newton X-ray data for the two MSPs, confirming the X-ray emission properties of PSRB1937+21 and finding evidence (~4s) for pulsed emission from PSRB1957+20 for the first time. In both cases the gamma-ray emission profile is characterized by two peaks separated by half a rotation and are in close alignment with components observed in radio and X-rays. These two pulsars join PSRsJ0034-0534 and J2214+3000 to form an emerging class of gamma-ray MSPs with phase-aligned peaks in different energy bands. The modeling of the radio and gamma-ray emission profiles suggests co-located emission regions in the outer magnetosphere.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2012
publisher Institute of Physics Publishing
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-149372017-09-13T15:01:40Z Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission? Guillemot, L. Johnson, T. Venter, C. Kerr, M. Pancrazi, B. Livingstone, M. Janssen, G. Jaroenjittichai, P. Kramer, M. Cognard, I. Stappers, B. Harding, A. Camilo, F. Espinoza, C. Freire, P. Gargano, F. Grove, J. Johnston, S. Michelson, P. Noutsos, A. Parent, D. Ransom, S. Ray, P. Shannon, Ryan Smith, D. Theureau, G. Thorsett, S. Webb, N. We report the detection of pulsed gamma-ray emission from the fast millisecond pulsars (MSPs) B1937+21 (also known as J1939+2134) and B1957+20 (J1959+2048) using 18 months of survey data recorded by the Fermi Large Area Telescope and timing solutions based on radio observations conducted at the Westerbork and Nançay radio telescopes. In addition, we analyzed archival Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer and XMM-Newton X-ray data for the two MSPs, confirming the X-ray emission properties of PSRB1937+21 and finding evidence (~4s) for pulsed emission from PSRB1957+20 for the first time. In both cases the gamma-ray emission profile is characterized by two peaks separated by half a rotation and are in close alignment with components observed in radio and X-rays. These two pulsars join PSRsJ0034-0534 and J2214+3000 to form an emerging class of gamma-ray MSPs with phase-aligned peaks in different energy bands. The modeling of the radio and gamma-ray emission profiles suggests co-located emission regions in the outer magnetosphere. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14937 10.1088/0004-637X/744/1/33 Institute of Physics Publishing unknown
spellingShingle Guillemot, L.
Johnson, T.
Venter, C.
Kerr, M.
Pancrazi, B.
Livingstone, M.
Janssen, G.
Jaroenjittichai, P.
Kramer, M.
Cognard, I.
Stappers, B.
Harding, A.
Camilo, F.
Espinoza, C.
Freire, P.
Gargano, F.
Grove, J.
Johnston, S.
Michelson, P.
Noutsos, A.
Parent, D.
Ransom, S.
Ray, P.
Shannon, Ryan
Smith, D.
Theureau, G.
Thorsett, S.
Webb, N.
Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title_full Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title_fullStr Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title_full_unstemmed Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title_short Pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: A case for caustic radio emission?
title_sort pulsed gamma rays from the original millisecond and black widow pulsars: a case for caustic radio emission?
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14937