Population synthesis studies of isolated neutron stars with magnetic field decay
S.B. Popov (1), J.A. Pons (2), J.A. Miralles (2), P.A. Boldin (3), B., Posselt (4) ((1) Sternberg Astronomical Institute, (2) University of, Alicante, (3) MEPhI, (4) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)

TL;DR
This study uses population synthesis models incorporating magnetic field decay and neutron star cooling to match observational data across various neutron star populations, revealing initial magnetic field distributions and decay processes.
Contribution
First comprehensive population synthesis model that simultaneously fits multiple neutron star populations considering magnetic field decay and recent cooling theories.
Findings
Initial magnetic field distribution is log-normal with mean log B0 ~13.25 G.
Approximately 10% of neutron stars are born as magnetars.
Magnetic fields decay significantly during the first million years.
Abstract
We perform population synthesis studies of different types of neutron stars (thermally emitting isolated neutron stars, normal radio pulsars, magnetars) taking into account the magnetic field decay and using results from the most recent advances in neutron star cooling theory. For the first time, we confront our results with observations using {\it simultaneously} the Log N -- Log S distribution for nearby isolated neutron stars, the Log N -- Log L distribution for magnetars, and the distribution of radio pulsars in the -- diagram. For this purpose, we fix a baseline neutron star model (all microphysics input), and other relevant parameters to standard values (velocity distribution, mass spectrum, birth rates ...), allowing to vary the initial magnetic field strength. We find that our theoretical model is consistent with all sets of data if the initial magnetic field…
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