A pilot ASKAP survey of radio transient events in the region around the intermittent pulsar PSR J1107-5907

Open Access
Authors
  • G. Hobbs
  • I. Heywood
  • M.E. Bell
  • M. Kerr
  • A. Rowlinson ORCID logo
  • S. Johnston
  • R.M. Shannon
  • M.A. Voronkov
  • C. Ward
  • J. Banyer
  • P.J. Hancock
  • T. Murphy
  • J.R. Allison
  • S.W. Amy
  • L. Ball
  • K. Bannister
  • D.C.-J. Bock
  • D. Brodrick
  • M. Brothers
  • A.J. Brown
  • J. D. Bunton
  • J. Chapman
  • A.P. Chippendale
  • Y. Chung
  • D. DeBoer
  • P. Diamond
  • P.G. Edwards
  • R. Ekers
  • R.H. Ferris
  • R. Forsyth
  • R. Gough
  • A. Grancea
  • N. Gupta
  • L. Harvey-Smith
  • S. Hay
  • D.B. Hayman
  • A.W. Hotan
  • S. Hoyle
  • B. Humphreys
  • B. Indermuehle
  • C.E. Jacka
  • C.A. Jackson
  • S. Jackson
  • K. Jeganathan
  • J. Joseph
  • R. Kendall
  • D. Kiraly
  • B. Koribalski
  • M. Leach
  • E. Lenc
  • A. MacLeod
  • S. Mader
  • M. Marquarding
  • J. Marvil
  • N. McClure-Griffiths
  • D. McConnell
  • P. Mirtschin
  • S. Neuhold
  • A. Ng
  • R.P. Norris
  • J. O'Sullivan
  • S. Pearce
  • C.J. Phillips
  • A. Popping
  • R.Y. Qiao
  • J.E. Reynolds
  • P. Roberts
  • R.J. Sault
  • A.E.T. Schinckel
  • P. Serra
  • R. Shaw
  • T.W. Shimwell
  • M. Storey
  • A.W. Sweetnam
  • A. Tzioumis
  • T. Westmeier
  • M. Whiting
  • C.D. Wilson
Publication date 11-03-2016
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume | Issue number 456 | 4
Pages (from-to) 3948-3960
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We use observations from the Boolardy Engineering Test Array (BETA) of the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescope to search for transient radio sources in the field around the intermittent pulsar PSR J1107−5907. The pulsar is thought to switch between an ‘off’ state in which no emission is detectable, a weak state and a strong state. We ran three independent transient detection pipelines on two-minute snapshot images from a 13 h BETA observation in order to (1) study the emission from the pulsar, (2) search for other transient emission from elsewhere in the image and (3) to compare the results from the different transient detection pipelines. The pulsar was easily detected as a transient source and, over the course of the observations, it switched into the strong state three times giving a typical time-scale between the strong emission states of 3.7 h. After the first switch it remained in the strong state for almost 40 min. The other strong states lasted less than 4 min. The second state change was confirmed using observations with the Parkes radio telescope. No other transient events were found and we place constraints on the surface density of such events on these time-scales. The high sensitivity Parkes observations enabled us to detect individual bright pulses during the weak state and to study the strong state over a wide observing band. We conclude by showing that future transient surveys with ASKAP will have the potential to probe the intermittent pulsar population.
Document type Article
Note This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2016 The Author(s) published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2893
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2016MNRAS.456.3948H/abstract
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