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arxiv: 1410.0886 · v1 · submitted 2014-10-03 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

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45 Years of Rotation of the Crab Pulsar

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classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords glitchesraterotationbrakingslowdownbeencrabdecrease
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The 30-Hz rotation rate of the Crab pulsar has been monitored at Jodrell Bank Observatory since 1984 and by other observatories before then. Since 1968, the rotation rate has decreased by about $0.5$\,Hz, interrupted only by sporadic and small spin up events (glitches). 24 of these events have been observed, including a significant concentration of 15 occurring over an interval of 11 years following MJD 50000. The monotonic decrease of the slowdown rate is partially reversed at glitches. This reversal comprises a step and an asymptotic exponential with a 320-day time constant, as determined in the three best-isolated glitches. The cumulative effect of all glitches is to reduce the decrease in slowdown rate by about 6\%. Overall, a low mean braking index of $2.342(1)$ is measured for the whole period, compared with values close to $2.5$ in intervals between glitches. Removing the effects of individual glitches reveals an underlying power law slowdown with the same braking index of 2.5. We interpret this value in terms of a braking torque due to a dipolar magnetic field in which the inclination angle between the dipole and rotation axes is increasing. There may also be further effects due to a monopolar particle wind or infalling supernova debris.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

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  1. Searching for axions with time resolved pulsar polarimetry

    hep-ph 2026-03 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Time-resolved optical polarimetry of the Crab pulsar is used to place bounds on the axion-photon coupling via oscillating axion fields induced by the pulsar's magnetic field.