Detections of millisecond pulsars with the Fermi Large Area Telescope
Lucas Guillemot

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of pulsed gamma-ray emission from eight galactic millisecond pulsars using the Fermi LAT, revealing their emission characteristics and suggesting many unresolved gamma-ray sources may be MSPs.
Contribution
It presents the first firm gamma-ray detections of galactic millisecond pulsars with Fermi LAT and compares their emission properties to normal pulsars.
Findings
Eight galactic MSPs detected as gamma-ray sources
Gamma-ray emission similar to normal pulsars
Potential for many unresolved MSPs as gamma-ray sources
Abstract
The Fermi observatory was launched on June 11, 2008. It hosts the \emph{Large Area Telescope} (LAT), sensitive to -ray photons from 20 MeV to over 300 GeV. When the LAT began its activity, nine young and energetic pulsars were known in rays. At least several tens of pulsar detections by the LAT were predicted before launch. The LAT also allowed the study of millisecond pulsars (MSPs), never firmly detected in rays before Fermi. This thesis first presents the pulsar timing campaign for the LAT, in collaboration with large radiotelescopes and X-ray telescopes, allowing for high sensitivity pulsed searches. Furthermore, it lead to quasi-homogeneous coverage of the galactic MSPs, so that the search for pulsations in LAT data for this population of stars was not affected by an \emph{a priori} bias. We present a search for pulsations from these objects in LAT…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
