Classification of pulsars into bimodal kick modes shows low-B objects overabundant in the low-velocity mode, with no high-velocity examples below 10^11 G.
Pulsar Population Synthesis with Magnetorotational Evolution: Constraining the Decay of Magnetic field
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We present a population synthesis model for normal radio pulsars in the Galaxy incorporating the latest developments in the field and the magnetorotational evolution processes. Our model considers spin-down with a force-free magnetosphere and the decay of the magnetic field strength and its inclination angle. The simulated pulsar population is fit to a large observation sample that covers the majority of radio surveys using the Markov Chain Monte Carlo technique. We compare the distributions of four major observables: spin period (P), spin down rate($\dot{P}$), dispersion measure, and radio flux density using accurate high-dimensional Kolmogoro-Smirnov statistics. We test two B-field decay scenarios, an exponential model motivated by ohmic dissipation and a power-law model motivated by the Hall effect. The former clearly provides a better fit, and it can successfully reproduce the observed pulsar distributions with a decay timescale of $8.3_{-3.0}^{+3.9}$ Myr. The result suggests that significant B-field decay in aged pulsars and ohmic dissipation could be the dominant process.
fields
astro-ph.HE 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Kick bimodality of neutron stars and mode dependence of their parameters
Classification of pulsars into bimodal kick modes shows low-B objects overabundant in the low-velocity mode, with no high-velocity examples below 10^11 G.