Precision Astrometry with the Very Long Baseline Array: Parallaxes and Proper Motions for 14 Pulsars
S. Chatterjee, W. F. Brisken, W. H. T. Vlemmings, W. M. Goss, T. J. W., Lazio, J. M. Cordes, S. E. Thorsett, E. B. Fomalont, A. G. Lyne, M. Kramer

TL;DR
This study uses VLBA phase-referenced observations to measure parallaxes and proper motions for 14 pulsars, providing insights into their distances, velocities, origins, and the interstellar medium's structure.
Contribution
It presents a detailed methodology for high-precision pulsar astrometry using VLBA, including new measurements and analysis techniques, improving understanding of pulsar kinematics and Galactic electron density.
Findings
Young pulsars move away from the Galactic plane.
Kinematic and spindown age estimates generally agree.
Electron density models sometimes underestimate pulsar distances.
Abstract
Astrometry can bring powerful constraints to bear on a variety of scientific questions about neutron stars, including their origins, astrophysics, evolution, and environments. Using phase-referenced observations at the VLBA, in conjunction with pulsar gating and in-beam calibration, we have measured the parallaxes and proper motions for 14 pulsars. The smallest measured parallax in our sample is 0.13+-0.02 mas for PSR B1541+09, which has a most probable distance of 7.2+1.3-1.1 kpc. We detail our methods, including initial VLA surveys to select candidates and find in-beam calibrators, VLBA phase-referencing, pulsar gating, calibration, and data reduction. The use of the bootstrap method to estimate astrometric uncertainties in the presence of unmodeled systematic errors is also described. Based on our new model-independent estimates for distance and transverse velocity, we investigate…
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