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91̽»¨
sky and dish

Aris Karastergiou

Professor of Astrophysics and Fellow at St Edmund Hall

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Gamma-ray astronomy
Aris.Karastergiou@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73642
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 603C
  • About
  • Publications

The ubiquity of variable radio emission and spin-down rates in pulsars

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press (OUP) (2025) staf427

Authors:

ME Lower, A Karastergiou, S Johnston, PR Brook, S Dai, M Kerr, RN Manchester, LS Oswald, RM Shannon, C Sobey, P Weltevrede

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT – XV. A comparison of the radio emission properties of slow and millisecond pulsars

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 532:3 (2024) 3558-3566

Authors:

A Karastergiou, S Johnston, B Posselt, LS Oswald, M Kramer, P Weltevrede

Abstract:

We use data from the MeerTime project on the MeerKAT telescope to ask whether the radio emission properties of millisecond pulsars (MSPs) and slowly rotating, younger pulsars (SPs) are similar or different. We show that the flux density spectra of both populations are similarly steep, and the widths of MSP profiles obey the same dependence on the rotational period as slow pulsars. We also show that the polarization of MSPs has similar properties to slow pulsars. The commonly used pseudo-luminosity of pulsars, defined as the product of the flux density and the distance squared, is not appropriate for drawing conclusions about the relative intrinsic radio luminosity of SPs and MSPs. We show that it is possible to scale the pseudo-luminosity to account for the pulse duty cycle and the solid angle of the radio beam, in such a way that MSPs and SPs do not show clear differences in intrinsic luminosity. The data therefore 91̽»¨ common emission physics between the two populations in spite of orders of magnitude difference in their period derivatives and inferred, surface, dipole magnetic field strengths.

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT XV: A comparison of the radio emission properties of slow and millisecond pulsars

(2024)

Authors:

A Karastergiou, S Johnston, B Posselt, LS Oswald, M Kramer, P Weltevrede

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT XIV: On the high linearly polarized pulsar signals

(2024)

Authors:

Simon Johnston, Dipanjan Mitra, Michael Keith, Lucy Oswald, Aris Karastergiou

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT – XIII. Timing, flux density, rotation measure, and dispersion measure time series of 597 pulsars

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 530:2 (2024) 1581-1591

Authors:

MJ Keith, S Johnston, A Karastergiou, P Weltevrede, ME Lower, A Basu, B Posselt, LS Oswald, A Parthasarathy, AD Cameron, M Serylak, S Buchner

Abstract:

We report here on the timing of 597 pulsars over the last four years with the MeerKAT telescope. We provide times of arrival, pulsar ephemeris files, and per-epoch measurements of the flux density, dispersion measure (DM), and rotation measure (RM) for each pulsar. In addition, we use a Gaussian process to model the timing residuals to measure the spin frequency derivative at each epoch. We also report the detection of 11 glitches in nine individual pulsars. We find significant DM and RM variations in 87 and 76 pulsars, respectively. We find that the DM variations scale approximately linearly with DM, which is broadly in agreement with models of the ionized interstellar medium. The observed RM variations seem largely independent of DM, which may suggest that the RM variations are dominated by variations in the interstellar magnetic field on the line of sight, rather than varying electron density. We also find that normal pulsars have around 5 times greater amplitude of DM variability compared to millisecond pulsars, and surmise that this is due to the known difference in their velocity distributions.

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