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Discovery and follow-up of a quasiperiodically nulling and sub-pulse drifting pulsar with the Murchison Widefield Array

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arxiv 2405.16725 v2 pith:UGNXQ5BQ submitted 2024-05-26 astro-ph.HE

Discovery and follow-up of a quasiperiodically nulling and sub-pulse drifting pulsar with the Murchison Widefield Array

classification astro-ph.HE
keywords pulsarnullingdriftingsub-pulsediscoveryemissionradioanalysis
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The phenomenon of pulsar nulling, where pulsars temporarily and stochastically cease their radio emission, is thought to be indicative of a `dying' pulsar, where radio emission ceases entirely. Here we report the discovery of a long-period pulsar, PSR J0452-3418, from the ongoing Southern-sky MWA Rapid Two-meter (SMART) pulsar survey. The pulsar has a rotation period of ${\sim}$1.67\,s and a dispersion measure of 19.8\,\dmu, and it exhibits both quasi-periodic nulling and sub-pulse drifting. Periodic nulling is uncommon, only reported in $<1$\% of the pulsar population, with even a smaller fraction showing periodic nulling and sub-pulse drifting. We describe the discovery and follow-up of the pulsar, including a positional determination using high-resolution imaging with the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (uGMRT), initial timing analysis using the combination of MWA and uGMRT data, and detailed characterisation of the nulling and drifting properties in the MWA's frequency band (140-170\,MHz). Our analysis suggests a nulling fraction of 34$\pm6$\% and a nulling periodicity of 42$^{+1.5}_{-1.3}$ pulses. We measure the phase ($P_2$) and time modulation ($P_3$) caused by the sub-pulse drifting, with an average $P_2$ of 7.1$^{+26.3}_{-3.1}$ degrees and a $P_3$ of 4.8$^{+1.5}_{-0.9}$ pulses. We compare and contrast the observed properties with those of other pulsars that exhibit sub-pulse drifting and quasi-periodic nulling phenomena, and find that the majority of these objects tend to be in the `death valley' in the period-period derivative ($P$-$\dot{P}$) diagram. We also discuss some broader implications for pulsar emission physics and the detectability of similar objects using next-generation pulsar surveys.

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  1. The Southern-sky MWA Rapid Two-metre (SMART) pulsar survey--IV. Survey update and an atlas of 205 non-recycled southern pulsars

    astro-ph.HE 2026-07 accept novelty 6.0

    Atlas of 205 non-recycled southern pulsars at 140–170 MHz from MWA SMART data, with profiles, DMs, RMs, fluxes and public data products for SKA-Low.