The Green Bank Telescope 350 MHz Drift-scan Survey I: Survey Observations and the Discovery of 13 Pulsars

Over the summer of 2007, we obtained 1191 hours of `drift-scan' pulsar search observations with the Green Bank Telescope at a radio frequency of 350 MHz. Here we describe the survey setup, search procedure, and the discovery and follow-up timing of thirteen pulsars. Among the new discoveries, o...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2012-10
Hauptverfasser: Boyles, Jason, Lynch, Ryan S, Ransom, Scott M, Stairs, Ingrid H, Lorimer, Duncan R, McLaughlin, Maura A, Hessels, Jason W T, Kaspi, Vicky M, Kondratiev, Vlad I, Archibald, Anne, Berndsen, Aaron, Cardoso, Rogerio F, Cherry, Angus, Epstein, Courtney R, Chen Karako-Argaman, McPhee, Christie A, Pennucci, Tim, Roberts, Mallory S E, Stovall, Kevin, Joeri van Leeuwen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Over the summer of 2007, we obtained 1191 hours of `drift-scan' pulsar search observations with the Green Bank Telescope at a radio frequency of 350 MHz. Here we describe the survey setup, search procedure, and the discovery and follow-up timing of thirteen pulsars. Among the new discoveries, one (PSR J1623-0841) was discovered only through its single pulses, two (PSRs J1327-0755 and J1737-0814) are millisecond pulsars, and another (PSR J2222-0137) is a mildly recycled pulsar. PSR J1327-0755 is a 2.7 ms pulsar at a DM of 27.9 pc cm^{-3} in a 8.7 day orbit with a minimum companion mass of 0.22 solar mass. PSR J1737-0814 is a 4.2 ms pulsar at a DM of 55.3 pc cm^{-3} in a 79.3 day orbit with a minimum companion mass of 0.06 solar mass. PSR J2222-0137 is a 32.8 ms pulsar at a very low DM of 3.27 pc cm^{-3} in a 2.4 day orbit with a minimum companion mass of 1.11 solar mass. It is most likely a white dwarf-neutron star system or an unusual low-eccentricity double neutron star system. Ten other pulsars discovered in this survey are reported in the companion paper Lynch et al. 2012.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1209.4293