Data

Parkes observations for project P1050 semester 2023OCTS_01

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
Sengar, Rahul ; Possenti, Andrea ; Johnston, Simon ; Kramer, Michael ; Burgay, Marta ; Bailes, Matthew ; Bhat, Ramesh ; van Straten, Willem ; Stappers, Benjamin ; Champion, David ; Jameson, Andrew ; Cameron, Andrew ; Ng, Cherry ; Petroff, Emily ; Barr, Ewan ; Flynn, Chris ; Morello, Vincent ; Bhandari, Shivani ; Balakrishnan, Vishnu ; Wongphechauxsorn, Jompoj ; Chen, Weiwei ; Colom I Bernadich, Miquel
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25919/01nq-aw33&rft.title=Parkes observations for project P1050 semester 2023OCTS_01&rft.identifier=https://doi.org/10.25919/01nq-aw33&rft.publisher=Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation&rft.description=This is a request for the observation time for the timing campaign of new pulsars discovered in the reprocessing of the low-latitude Galactic plane section of the HTRU-S survey (HTRU-S LowLat) and the Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey (PMPS). We have completed 90 % of the HTRU-S LowLat survey and completed zero acceleration PMPS search with GPU-based coherent acceleration search, template bank, and fast folding algorithm pipelines and now have discovered 112 previously unknown pulsars among which 18 were found in the PMPS. Interesting science can usually only be derived from a new pulsar after confirmation, and a follow-up timing campaign is carried out. At least 1-2 year of initial timing is the minimum timespan required to fully characterise any newly-discovered pulsars, essential for deriving pulsar parameters such as the characteristic age, magnetic field strength, and spin-down rate, as well as for detecting any unexpected behaviour of the pulsar which might result from emission instabilities. This project is necessary for the timing of several interesting pulsars, including binary pulsars, high DM pulsars, scattered profile pulsars, and bright ones that show emissions in larger bandwidths in the UWL band. Apart from this, finding the nature of a unique binary pulsar system via a dedicated observing campaign is also another goal. The follow-up timing in semester 2023OCTS will assist in completing many exciting large-term science goals.&rft.creator=Sengar, Rahul &rft.creator=Possenti, Andrea &rft.creator=Johnston, Simon &rft.creator=Kramer, Michael &rft.creator=Burgay, Marta &rft.creator=Bailes, Matthew &rft.creator=Bhat, Ramesh &rft.creator=van Straten, Willem &rft.creator=Stappers, Benjamin &rft.creator=Champion, David &rft.creator=Jameson, Andrew &rft.creator=Cameron, Andrew &rft.creator=Ng, Cherry &rft.creator=Petroff, Emily &rft.creator=Barr, Ewan &rft.creator=Flynn, Chris &rft.creator=Morello, Vincent &rft.creator=Bhandari, Shivani &rft.creator=Balakrishnan, Vishnu &rft.creator=Wongphechauxsorn, Jompoj &rft.creator=Chen, Weiwei &rft.creator=Colom I Bernadich, Miquel &rft.date=2023&rft.edition=v1&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/&rft_rights=Data is accessible online and may be reused in accordance with licence conditions&rft_rights=All Rights (including copyright) CSIRO 2023.&rft_subject=pulsars&rft_subject=neutron stars&rft_subject=compact binaries and/or black holes&rft_subject=Astronomical sciences not elsewhere classified&rft_subject=Astronomical sciences&rft_subject=PHYSICAL SCIENCES&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
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Data is accessible online and may be reused in accordance with licence conditions

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Brief description

This is a request for the observation time for the timing campaign of new pulsars discovered in the reprocessing of the low-latitude Galactic plane section of the HTRU-S survey (HTRU-S LowLat) and the Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey (PMPS). We have completed 90 % of the HTRU-S LowLat survey and completed zero acceleration PMPS search with GPU-based coherent acceleration search, template bank, and fast folding algorithm pipelines and now have discovered 112 previously unknown pulsars among which 18 were found in the PMPS. Interesting science can usually only be derived from a new pulsar after confirmation, and a follow-up timing campaign is carried out. At least 1-2 year of initial timing is the minimum timespan required to fully characterise any newly-discovered pulsars, essential for deriving pulsar parameters such as the characteristic age, magnetic field strength, and spin-down rate, as well as for detecting any unexpected behaviour of the pulsar which might result from emission instabilities. This project is necessary for the timing of several interesting pulsars, including binary pulsars, high DM pulsars, scattered profile pulsars, and bright ones that show emissions in larger bandwidths in the UWL band. Apart from this, finding the nature of a unique binary pulsar system via a dedicated observing campaign is also another goal. The follow-up timing in semester 2023OCTS will assist in completing many exciting large-term science goals.

Available: 2023-12-18

Data time period: 2023-09-30 to 2024-03-31

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