The glitch-induced identity changes of PSR J1119-6127
Patrick Weltevrede, Simon Johnston, Cristobal M. Espinoza

TL;DR
This paper studies the complex radio emission behaviors of pulsar PSR J1119-6127, especially after glitches, suggesting magnetospheric reconfigurations and proposing a link between glitch activity and transient radio emissions in neutron stars.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of glitch-induced emission changes and refines the pulsar's braking index, linking RRAT-like behaviors to magnetospheric dynamics and glitch activity.
Findings
Rare glitch-associated emission changes observed
Post-glitch spin-down rate decreases, unlike typical pulsars
Potential existence of neutron stars visible only after glitches
Abstract
We demonstrate that the high-magnetic field pulsar J1119-6127 exhibits three different types of behaviour in the radio band. Trailing the "normal" profile peak there is an "intermittent" peak and these components are flanked by two additional components showing very erratic "RRAT-like" emission. Both the intermittent and RRAT-like events are extremely rare and are preceded by a large amplitude glitch in the spin-down parameters. The post-glitch spin-down rate is smaller than the pre-glitch rate. This type of relaxation is very unusual for the pulsar population as a whole, but is observed in the glitch recovery of a RRAT. The abnormal emission behaviour in PSR J1119-6127 was observed up to three months after the epoch of the large glitch, suggestive of changes in the magnetospheric conditions during the fast part of the recovery process. We argue that both the anomalous recoveries and…
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