Pulsed Gamma-rays from the millisecond pulsar J0030+0451 with the Fermi Large Area Telescope
Fermi/LAT Collaboration

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of gamma-ray pulsations from the millisecond pulsar PSR J0030+0451 using Fermi LAT, revealing its gamma-ray emission profile, spectrum, and efficiency despite its low spin-down power.
Contribution
First detection of gamma-ray pulsations from PSR J0030+0451, expanding understanding of gamma-ray emission in low spin-down power millisecond pulsars.
Findings
Gamma-ray pulsations detected from PSR J0030+0451.
Emission profile shows two narrow peaks separated by 0.44 in phase.
Gamma-ray efficiency estimated at approximately 15%.
Abstract
We report the discovery of gamma-ray pulsations from the nearby isolated millisecond pulsar PSR J0030+0451 with the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on the \emph{Fermi} Gamma-ray Space Telescope (formerly GLAST). This discovery makes PSR J0030+0451 the second millisecond pulsar to be detected in gamma-rays after PSR J0218+4232, observed by the EGRET instrument on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. The spin-down power 3.5 10 ergs s is an order of magnitude lower than the empirical lower bound of previously known gamma-ray pulsars. The emission profile is characterized by two narrow peaks, respectively 0.07 0.01 and 0.08 0.02 wide, separated by 0.44 0.02 in phase. The first gamma-ray peak falls 0.15 0.01 after the main radio peak. The pulse shape is similar to that of the "normal" gamma-ray pulsars. An exponentially cut-off power-law…
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