Literature DB >> 16929292

Transient pulsed radio emission from a magnetar.

Fernando Camilo1, Scott M Ransom, Jules P Halpern, John Reynolds, David J Helfand, Neil Zimmerman, John Sarkissian.   

Abstract

Anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs) are slowly rotating neutron stars with very bright and highly variable X-ray emission that are believed to be powered by ultra-strong magnetic fields of >10(14) G, according to the 'magnetar' model. The radio pulsations that have been observed from more than 1,700 neutron stars with weaker magnetic fields have never been detected from any of the dozen known magnetars. The X-ray pulsar XTE J1810-197 was revealed (in 2003) as the first AXP with transient emission when its luminosity increased 100-fold from the quiescent level; a coincident radio source of unknown origin was detected one year later. Here we show that XTE J1810-197 emits bright, narrow, highly linearly polarized radio pulses, observed at every rotation, thereby establishing that magnetars can be radio pulsars. There is no evidence of radio emission before the 2003 X-ray outburst (unlike ordinary pulsars, which emit radio pulses all the time), and the flux varies from day to day. The flux at all radio frequencies is approximately equal--and at >20 GHz XTE J1810-197 is currently the brightest neutron star known. These observations link magnetars to ordinary radio pulsars, rule out alternative accretion models for AXPs, and provide a new window into the coronae of magnetars.

Entities:  

Year:  2006        PMID: 16929292     DOI: 10.1038/nature04986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  5 in total

1.  Grand unification of neutron stars.

Authors:  Victoria M Kaspi
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-04-19       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Binary and Millisecond Pulsars.

Authors:  Duncan R Lorimer
Journal:  Living Rev Relativ       Date:  2008-11-04       Impact factor: 40.429

3.  A repeating fast radio burst.

Authors:  L G Spitler; P Scholz; J W T Hessels; S Bogdanov; A Brazier; F Camilo; S Chatterjee; J M Cordes; F Crawford; J Deneva; R D Ferdman; P C C Freire; V M Kaspi; P Lazarus; R Lynch; E C Madsen; M A McLaughlin; C Patel; S M Ransom; A Seymour; I H Stairs; B W Stappers; J van Leeuwen; W W Zhu
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-03-02       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Sub-second periodicity in a fast radio burst.

Authors:  Bridget C Andersen; Kevin Bandura; Mohit Bhardwaj; P J Boyle; Charanjot Brar; Daniela Breitman; Tomas Cassanelli; Shami Chatterjee; Pragya Chawla; Jean-François Cliche; Davor Cubranic; Alice P Curtin; Meiling Deng; Matt Dobbs; Fengqiu Adam Dong; Emmanuel Fonseca; B M Gaensler; Utkarsh Giri; Deborah C Good; Alex S Hill; Alexander Josephy; J F Kaczmarek; Zarif Kader; Joseph Kania; Victoria M Kaspi; Calvin Leung; D Z Li; Hsiu-Hsien Lin; Kiyoshi W Masui; Ryan Mckinven; Juan Mena-Parra; Marcus Merryfield; B W Meyers; D Michilli; Arun Naidu; Laura Newburgh; C Ng; Anna Ordog; Chitrang Patel; Aaron B Pearlman; Ue-Li Pen; Emily Petroff; Ziggy Pleunis; Masoud Rafiei-Ravandi; Mubdi Rahman; Scott Ransom; Andre Renard; Pranav Sanghavi; Paul Scholz; J Richard Shaw; Kaitlyn Shin; Seth R Siegel; Saurabh Singh; Kendrick Smith; Ingrid Stairs; Chia Min Tan; Shriharsh P Tendulkar; Keith Vanderlinde; D V Wiebe; Dallas Wulf; Andrew Zwaniga
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 69.504

5.  Discovery of a radio emitting neutron star with an ultra-long spin period of 76 seconds.

Authors:  Manisha Caleb; Ian Heywood; Benjamin Stappers; Kaustubh Rajwade; Mateusz Malenta; Ewan Barr; Weiwei Chen; Vincent Morello; Sotiris Sanidas; Jakob van den Eijnden; Michael Kramer; David Buckley; Jaco Brink; Sara Elisa Motta; Patrick Woudt; Patrick Weltevrede; Fabian Jankowski; Mayuresh Surnis; Sarah Buchner; Mechiel Christiaan Bezuidenhout; Laura Nicole Driessen; Rob Fender
Journal:  Nat Astron       Date:  2022-05-30       Impact factor: 15.647

  5 in total

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