2001ApJ...553..341E


Query : 2001ApJ...553..341E

2001ApJ...553..341E - Astrophys. J., 553, 341-357 (2001/May-3)

Emission beam geometry of selected pulsars derived from average pulse polarization data.

EVERETT J.E. and WEISBERG J.M.

Abstract (from CDS):

By fitting the classical rotating vector model (RVM) to high-quality polarization data for selected radio pulsars, we find the inclination of the magnetic axis to the spin axis, α, as well as the minimum angle between the line of sight and the magnetic axis, β, for 10 objects. We give a full treatment of statistical errors in the fitting process. We also present a dictionary and conversion table of various investigators' geometric definitions to facilitate future comparisons. We compare our results with other RVM fits and with empirical/geometrical (E/G) approaches, and we examine the strengths and weaknesses of RVM fits and E/G investigations for the determination of pulsar emission beam geometry. Our fits to B0950+08 show that it is an orthogonal rotator with the main and interpulse radiation emitted from opposite magnetic poles, whereas earlier RVM fits indicated that it is an almost-aligned, single-magnetic pole emitter. We demonstrate that low-level emission across a wide longitude range, when properly weighted in the RVM fit, conclusively favors the former scenario. B0823+26 is also an orthogonal rotator. We find that B1929+10 emits into its wide observed range of longitudes from portions of a single cone that is almost aligned with the spin axis. This result agrees with other RVM fits but conflicts with the E/G findings of Rankin & Rathnasree. We determine that convergent RVM solutions can be found only for a minority of pulsars: generally those having emission over a relatively wide longitude range, and especially those pulsars having interpulse emission. In pulsar B0823+26, our preferred fit to data at all longitudes yields a solution differing by several σ from a fit to the main pulse/postcursor combination alone. For pulsar B0950+08, separate fits to the main pulse region, the interpulse region, and our preferred fit to almost all longitudes, converge to results differing by several times the formal uncertainties. These results indicate that RVM fits are easily perturbed by systematic effects in polarized position angles and that the formal uncertainties significantly underestimate the actual errors.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Stars: Pulsars: General - Polarization - Stars: Neutron

Simbad objects: 10

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Number of rows : 10
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 PSR B0301+19 Psr 03 04 33.115 +19 32 51.40           ~ 224 0
2 PSR B0525+21 Psr 05 28 52.308 +22 00 01.00     14.30     ~ 356 0
3 PSR B0656+14 Psr 06 59 48.1960 +14 14 19.400   24.85 24.90     ~ 869 1
4 PSR B0823+26 Psr 08 26 51.5068 +26 37 21.297           ~ 512 1
5 PSR B0950+08 Psr 09 53 09.2970 +07 55 36.400           ~ 755 2
6 PSR B1541+09 Psr 15 43 38.8 +09 29 16           ~ 197 0
7 PSR B1839+09 Psr 18 41 55.9380 +09 12 08.300           ~ 122 0
8 PSR B1915+13 Psr 19 17 39.7864 +13 53 57.077           ~ 175 0
9 PSR B1916+14 Psr 19 18 23.638 +14 45 06.00           ~ 122 0
10 PSR B1929+10 Psr 19 32 14.0570 +10 59 33.380           ~ 753 0

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