The Millisecond Radio Sky: Transients from a Blind Single Pulse Search
S. Burke-Spolaor, M. Bailes

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of 14 new neutron stars, including RRATs, through a blind search for millisecond radio transients, revealing their relation to pulsars and suggesting RRATs may be nulling pulsars observed during brief active phases.
Contribution
The study introduces a new search methodology for millisecond radio transients and provides evidence linking RRATs to pulsars, including a potential transitional object.
Findings
14 new neutron stars discovered, including 7 RRATs.
RRATs have a similar galactic distribution to pulsars.
Some RRATs may be nulling pulsars observed during brief active periods.
Abstract
We present the results of a search for transient radio bursts of between 0.125 and 32 millisecond duration in two archival pulsar surveys of intermediate galactic latitudes with the Parkes multibeam receiver. Fourteen new neutron stars have been discovered, seven of which belong to the recently identified "rotating radio transients" (RRATs) class. Here we describe our search methodology, and discuss the new detections in terms of how the RRAT population relates to the general population of pulsars. The new detections indicate (1) that the galactic z-distribution of RRATs in the surveys closely resembles the distribution of pulsars, with objects up to 0.86 kpc from the galactic plane; (2) where measurable, the RRAT pulse widths are similar to that of individual pulses from pulsars of similar period, implying a similar beaming fraction; and (3) our new detections span a variety of nulling…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
