CHIME/Fast Radio Burst/Pulsar Discovery of a Nearby Long-period Radio Transient with a Timing Glitch

Open Access
Authors
  • Fengqiu Adam Dong
  • Tracy E. Clarke
  • Alice Curtin
  • Ajay Kumar
  • Ryan Mckinven
  • Kaitlyn Shin
  • Ingrid Stairs
  • Charanjot Brar
  • Kevin Burdge
  • Shami Chatterjee
  • Amanda M. Cook
  • Emmanuel Fonseca
  • B.M. Gaensler
  • Jason W. Hessels
  • Victoria M. Kaspi
  • Mattias Lazda
  • Robert Main
  • Kiyoshi W. Masui
  • James W. McKee
  • Bradley W. Meyers
  • Aaron B. Pearlman
  • Scott M. Ransom
  • Paul Scholz
  • Kendrick M. Smith
  • Chia Min Tan
Publication date 10-09-2025
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L49
Volume | Issue number 990 | 2
Number of pages 15
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract

We present the discovery of a 421 s long period transient using the CHIME telescope, CHIME J0630+25. The source is localized to R.A. = 06:30:38.4 ± 1 ′ decl. = 25:26:23 ± 1 ′ using voltage data acquired with the CHIME baseband system. A timing analysis shows that a model including a glitch is preferred over a nonglitch model with dF/F = 1.3 × 10−6, consistent with other glitching neutron stars. The timing model suggests a surface magnetic field of ∼1.5 × 1015 G and a characteristic age of ∼1.28 × 106 yr. A separate line of evidence to support a strong local magnetic field is an abnormally high rotation measure of RM = −347.8(6) rad m−2 relative to CHIME J0630+25’s modest dispersion measure of 22(1) pc cm−2, implying a dense local magneto-ionic structure. As a result, we believe that CHIME J0630+25 is a magnetized, slowly spinning, isolated neutron star. This marks CHIME J0630+25 as the longest period neutron star and the second-longest period neutron star with an inferred magnetar-like field. Based on dispersion measure models and comparison with pulsars with distance measurements, CHIME J0630+25 is located at a nearby distance of 170+310−100 pc (95.4%), making it an ideal candidate for follow-up studies.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/adfa8e
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105015103546
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