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arxiv: astro-ph/0502203 · v1 · submitted 2005-02-09 · 🌌 astro-ph

A Search for Giant Pulses from Millisecond Pulsars

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords giantpulsesmillisecondpulsarsemissionj1823-3021apulsewere
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We have searched for microsecond-timescale broadband emission from a sample of eighteen millisecond pulsars. Our study places strong limits on such emission from several millisecond pulsars and shows that it is only present in a small subset of millisecond pulsars. Giant pulses of up to 64 times the mean pulse energy were detected from PSR J1823-3021A in the globular cluster NGC 6624. In contrast to the giant pulses of PSR B1937+21, nearly all of the giant pulses from PSR J1823-3021A were distributed within the trailing half of the main-pulse component of the integrated pulse profile. The fact that no giant pulses were observed on the leading side of the main-pulse component suggests that giant pulses are preferentially emitted closer to the last open field line than ordinary emission. The correlation between giant pulse emissivity and spin-down luminosity in millisecond pulsars suggests that the high period derivative of PSR J1823-3021A is intrinsic and is not just an artifact of its acceleration in the gravitational potential of NGC 6624.

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  1. Searching for links between energetic millisecond pulsars and repeating fast radio bursts

    astro-ph.HE 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 4.0

    Wideband observations show M28A giant pulses differ from FRB 20200120E bursts in duration, luminosity, timing statistics, and spectral structure, yielding no strong evidence for a direct link.