The MeerKAT telescope as a pulsar facility System verification and early science results from MeerTime

Open Access
Authors
  • M. Bailes
  • A. Jameson
  • F. Abbate
  • E.D. Barr
  • N.D.R. Bhat
  • L. Bondonneau
  • M. Burgay
  • S.J. Buchner
  • F. Camilo
  • D.J. Champion
  • I. Cognard
  • P.B. Demorest
  • P.C.C. Freire
  • T. Gautam
  • M. Geyer
  • J.-M. Griessmeier
  • L. Guillemot
  • H. Hu
  • F. Jankowski
  • S. Johnston
  • A. Karastergiou
  • R. Karuppusamy
  • D. Kaur
  • M.J. Keith
  • M. Kramer
  • J. van Leeuwen
  • M.E. Lower
  • Y. Maan
  • M.A. McLaughlin
  • B.W. Meyers
  • S. Osłowski
  • L.S. Oswald
  • A. Parthasarathy
  • T. Pennucci
  • B. Posselt
  • A. Possenti
  • S.M. Ransom
  • D.J. Reardon
  • A. Ridolfi
  • C.T.G. Schollar
  • M. Serylak
  • G. Shaifullah
  • M. Shamohammadi
  • R.M. Shannon
  • C. Sobey
  • X. Song
  • R. Spiewak
  • I.H. Stairs
  • B.W. Stappers
  • W. van Straten
  • A. Szary
  • G. Theureau
  • V. Venkatraman Krishnan
  • P. Weltevrede
  • N. Wex
  • T.D. Abbott
  • G.B. Adams
  • J.P. Burger
  • R.R.G. Gamatham
  • M. Gouws
  • D.M. Horn
  • B. Hugo
  • A.F. Joubert
  • J.R. Manley
  • K. McAlpine
  • S.S. Passmoor
  • A. Peens-Hough
  • Z.R. Ramudzuli
  • A. Rust
  • S. Salie
  • L.C. Schwardt
  • R. Siebrits
  • G. Van Tonder
  • V. Van Tonder
  • M.G. Welz
Publication date 01-07-2020
Journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
Article number e028
Volume | Issue number 37
Number of pages 16
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We describe system verification tests and early science results from the pulsar processor (PTUSE) developed for the newly commissioned 64-dish SARAO MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa. MeerKAT is a high-gain (∼2.8 K Jy-1 ) low-system temperature (∼18 K at 20 cm) radio array that currently operates at 580–1 670 MHz and can produce tied-array beams suitable for pulsar observations. This paper presents results from the MeerTime Large Survey Project and commissioning tests with PTUSE. Highlights include observations of the double pulsar J0737-339A  , pulse profiles from 34 millisecond pulsars (MSPs) from a single 2.5-h observation of the Globular cluster Terzan 5, the rotation measure of Ter5O, a 420-sigma giant pulse from the Large Magellanic Cloud pulsar PSR  J0540-6919, and nulling identified in the slow pulsar PSR J0633–2015. One of the key design specifications for MeerKAT was absolute timing errors of less than 5 ns using their novel precise time system. Our timing of two bright MSPs confirm that MeerKAT delivers exceptional timing. PSR J2241-5236 exhibits a jitter limit a jitter timing of  <4 ns h-1 whilst timing of PSR J909-3744 over almost 11 months yields an rms residual of 66 ns with only 4 min integrations. Our results confirm that the MeerKAT is an exceptional pulsar telescope. The array can be split into four separate sub-arrays to time over 1 000 pulsars per day and the future deployment of S-band (1 750–3 500 MHz) receivers will further enhance its capabilities.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1017/pasa.2020.19
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.14366
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020PASA...37...28B/abstract
Downloads
Permalink to this page
Back