Searching a Thousand Radio Pulsars for Gamma-Ray Emission

  • D. A. Smith
  • , P. Bruel
  • , I. Cognard
  • , A. D. Cameron
  • , F. Camilo
  • , S. Dai
  • , L. Guillemot
  • , T. J. Johnson
  • , S. Johnston
  • , M. J. Keith
  • , M. Kerr
  • , M. Kramer
  • , A. G. Lyne
  • , R. N. Manchester
  • , R. Shannon
  • , C. Sobey
  • , B. W. Stappers
  • , P. Weltevrede

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Identifying as many gamma-ray pulsars as possible in the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) data helps test pulsar emission models by comparing predicted and observed properties for a large, varied sample with as little selection bias as possible. It also improves extrapolations from the observed population to estimate the contribution of unresolved pulsars to the diffuse gamma-ray emission. We use a recently developed method to determine the probability that a given gamma-ray photon comes from a known position in the sky, convolving the photon's energy with the LAT's energy-dependent point-spread function, without the need for an accurate spatial and spectral model of the gamma-ray sky around the pulsar. The method is simple and fast and, importantly, provides probabilities, or weights, for gamma-rays from pulsars too faint for phase-integrated detection. We applied the method to over a thousand pulsars for which we obtained rotation ephemerides from radio observations, and discovered gamma-ray pulsations from 16 pulsars, 12 young and 4 recycled. PSR J2208+4056 has spindown power Ė = 8 × 10 32 erg s -1 , about three times lower than the previous observed gamma-ray emission "deathline." PSRs J2208+4056 and J1816-0755 have radio interpulses, constraining their geometry and perhaps enhancing their gamma-ray luminosity. We discuss whether the deathline is an artifact of selection bias due to the pulsar distance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number78
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume871
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Jan 2019

Keywords

  • gamma rays: stars
  • pulsars: individual (J0636+5129, J1731-4744, J1816-0755, J2208+4056)

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