40 Years of Pulsars: The Birth and Evolution of Isolated Radio Pulsars
C.-A. Faucher-Giguere (1), V. M. Kaspi (2) ((1) Harvard University,, (2) McGill University)

TL;DR
This study uses population synthesis to model the birth and evolution of isolated radio pulsars, successfully reproducing observed distributions and providing insights into their birth properties, luminosities, and magnetic field evolution.
Contribution
The paper introduces a simple population model that accurately reproduces pulsar observations and suggests a relation between radio luminosity and pulsar parameters, with no significant magnetic field decay.
Findings
Pulsars are born in spiral arms with a birthrate of ~2.8 per century.
The initial spin period distribution extends to several hundred milliseconds.
Radio luminosities correlate with pulsar spin-down energy, fitting observed data.
Abstract
We investigate the birth and evolution of isolated radio pulsars using a population synthesis method, modeling the birth properties of the pulsars, their time evolution, and their detection in the Parkes and Swinburne Multibeam (MB) surveys. Together, the Parkes and Swinburne MB surveys have detected nearly 2/3 of the known pulsars and provide a remarkably homogeneous sample to compare with simulations. New proper motion measurements and an improved model of the distribution of free electrons in the interstellar medium, NE2001, also make revisiting these issues particularly worthwhile. We present a simple population model that reproduces the actual observations well, and consider others that fail. We conclude that: pulsars are born in the spiral arms, with the birthrate of 2.8+/-0.5 pulsars/century peaking at a distance ~3 kpc from the Galactic centre, and with mean initial speed of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
