An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33

We report on a systematic and sensitive search for pulsars and transient sources in the nearby spiral galaxy M33, conducted at 1.4 GHz with the Arecibo telescope's seven-beam receiver system, ALFA. Data were searched for both periodic and aperiodic sources, up to 1000 pc cm -3 in dispersion mea...

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Main Authors: Bhat, Ramesh, Cordes, J., Cox, P., Deneva, J., Hankins, T., Lazio, T., McLaughlin, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56011
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author Bhat, Ramesh
Cordes, J.
Cox, P.
Deneva, J.
Hankins, T.
Lazio, T.
McLaughlin, M.
author_facet Bhat, Ramesh
Cordes, J.
Cox, P.
Deneva, J.
Hankins, T.
Lazio, T.
McLaughlin, M.
author_sort Bhat, Ramesh
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We report on a systematic and sensitive search for pulsars and transient sources in the nearby spiral galaxy M33, conducted at 1.4 GHz with the Arecibo telescope's seven-beam receiver system, ALFA. Data were searched for both periodic and aperiodic sources, up to 1000 pc cm -3 in dispersion measure and on timescales from ~50µs to several seconds. The galaxy was sampled with 12 ALFA pointings, or 84pixels in total, each of which was searched for 2-3hr. We describe the observations, search methodologies, and analysis strategies applicable to multibeam systems, and comment on the data quality and statistics of spurious events that arise due to radio frequency interference. While these searches have not led to any conclusive signals of periodic or transient nature that originate in the galaxy, they illustrate some of the underlying challenges and difficulties in such searches and the efficacy of simultaneous multiple beams in the analysis of search output. The implied limits are ?5 µJy Mpc 2 in luminosity (at 1400MHz) for periodic sources in M33 with duty cycles ?5%. For short-duration transient signals (with pulse widths ?100µs), the limiting peak flux density is 100mJy, which would correspond to a 5s detection of bright giant pulses (~20 kJy) from Crab-like pulsars if located at the distance of M33. We discuss the implications of our null results for various source populations within the galaxy and comment on the future prospects to conduct even more sensitive searches with the upcoming next-generation instruments including the Square Kilometer Array and its pathfinders. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-560112023-02-22T06:24:17Z An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33 Bhat, Ramesh Cordes, J. Cox, P. Deneva, J. Hankins, T. Lazio, T. McLaughlin, M. We report on a systematic and sensitive search for pulsars and transient sources in the nearby spiral galaxy M33, conducted at 1.4 GHz with the Arecibo telescope's seven-beam receiver system, ALFA. Data were searched for both periodic and aperiodic sources, up to 1000 pc cm -3 in dispersion measure and on timescales from ~50µs to several seconds. The galaxy was sampled with 12 ALFA pointings, or 84pixels in total, each of which was searched for 2-3hr. We describe the observations, search methodologies, and analysis strategies applicable to multibeam systems, and comment on the data quality and statistics of spurious events that arise due to radio frequency interference. While these searches have not led to any conclusive signals of periodic or transient nature that originate in the galaxy, they illustrate some of the underlying challenges and difficulties in such searches and the efficacy of simultaneous multiple beams in the analysis of search output. The implied limits are ?5 µJy Mpc 2 in luminosity (at 1400MHz) for periodic sources in M33 with duty cycles ?5%. For short-duration transient signals (with pulse widths ?100µs), the limiting peak flux density is 100mJy, which would correspond to a 5s detection of bright giant pulses (~20 kJy) from Crab-like pulsars if located at the distance of M33. We discuss the implications of our null results for various source populations within the galaxy and comment on the future prospects to conduct even more sensitive searches with the upcoming next-generation instruments including the Square Kilometer Array and its pathfinders. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56011 10.1088/0004-637X/732/1/14 Institute of Physics Publishing unknown
spellingShingle Bhat, Ramesh
Cordes, J.
Cox, P.
Deneva, J.
Hankins, T.
Lazio, T.
McLaughlin, M.
An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title_full An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title_fullStr An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title_full_unstemmed An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title_short An Arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in M33
title_sort arecibo search for pulsars and transient sources in m33
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56011