The pulsar synchrotron: coherent radio emission
Ioannis Contopoulos

TL;DR
This paper presents a new model for pulsar radio emission based on an annular current near the separatrix, suggesting coherent synchrotron radiation from electrons and positrons in the magnetosphere.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism involving an unaccounted annular current at the separatrix, explaining coherent radio emission in aligned pulsars.
Findings
Estimated the position and thickness of the annular current.
Showed the emission is consistent with observed radio luminosities.
Predicted the scaling of radio power with pulsar parameters.
Abstract
We propose a simple physical picture for the generation of coherent radio emission in the axisymmetric pulsar magnetosphere that is quite different from the canonical paradigm of radio emission coming from the magnetic polar caps. In this first paper we consider only the axisymmetric case of an aligned rotator. Our picture capitalizes on an important element of the MHD representation of the magnetosphere, namely the separatrix between the corotating closed-line region (the `dead zone') and the open field lines that originate in the polar caps. Along the separatrix flows the return current that corresponds to the main magnetospheric electric current emanating from the polar caps. Across the separatrix, both the toroidal and poloidal components of the magnetic field change discontinuously. The poloidal component discontinuity requires the presence of a significant annular electric current…
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