Constraining compactness and magnetic field geometry of X-ray pulsars from the statistics of their pulse profiles
Marja Annala, Juri Poutanen (University of Oulu)

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray pulsar pulse profiles to constrain neutron star properties, finding that pulse profile statistics alone cannot reliably determine neutron star compactness or magnetic inclination.
Contribution
It provides a statistical comparison between observed pulse profiles and theoretical models, challenging previous claims about constraining neutron star compactness.
Findings
Pulse profile statistics do not constrain neutron star compactness.
Magnetic dipole inclination has an upper limit of 40 degrees.
Instrument sensitivity affects pulse profile detection and interpretation.
Abstract
The light curves observed from X-ray pulsars and magnetars reflect the radiation emission pattern, the geometry of the magnetic field, and the neutron star compactness. We study the statistics of X-ray pulse profiles in order to constrain the neutron star compactness and the magnetic field geometry. We collect the data for 124 X-ray pulsars, which are mainly in high-mass X-ray binary systems, and classify their pulse profiles according to the number of observed peaks seen during one spin period, dividing them into two classes, single- and double-peaked. We find that the pulsars are distributed about equally between both groups. We also compute the probabilities predicted by the theoretical models of two antipodal point-like spots that emit radiation according to the pencil-like emission patterns. These are then compared to the observed fraction of pulsars in the two classes. Assuming a…
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