Eight gamma-ray pulsars discovered in blind frequency searches of Fermi LAT data
P.M. Saz Parkinson, M. Dormody, M. Ziegler, P.S. Ray, A.A. Abdo, J., Ballet, M.G. Baring, A. Belfiore, T.H. Burnett, G.A. Caliandro, F. Camilo,, P.A. Caraveo, A. de Luca, E.C. Ferrara, P.C.C. Freire, J.E. Grove, C. Gwon,, A.K. Harding, R.P. Johnson, T.J. Johnson, S. Johnston

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of eight new gamma-ray pulsars using blind searches of Fermi LAT data, revealing diverse ages, energies, and associations, and providing detailed timing, spectral, and multiwavelength analyses.
Contribution
The study presents eight newly discovered gamma-ray pulsars from blind searches, including their timing models, spectral parameters, and multiwavelength counterparts, expanding the known population of radio-quiet gamma-ray pulsars.
Findings
Five pulsars are young and energetic within the Galactic plane.
One pulsar is associated with a TeV source near Westerlund 2.
All eight pulsars are radio-quiet with no pulsations detected in radio follow-up.
Abstract
We report the discovery of eight gamma-ray pulsars in blind frequency searches using the LAT, onboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. Five of the eight pulsars are young (tau_c<100 kyr), energetic (Edot>10^36 erg/s), and located within the Galactic plane (|b|<3 deg). The remaining three are older, less energetic, and located off the plane. Five pulsars are associated with sources included in the LAT bright gamma-ray source list, but only one, PSR J1413-6205, is clearly associated with an EGRET source. PSR J1023-5746 has the smallest characteristic age (tau_c=4.6 kyr) and is the most energetic (Edot=1.1E37 erg/s) of all gamma-ray pulsars discovered so far in blind searches. PSRs J1957+5033 and J2055+25 have the largest characteristic ages (tau_c~1 Myr) and are the least energetic (Edot~5E33 erg/s) of the newly-discovered pulsars. We present the timing models, light curves, and…
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