Stokes tomography of radio pulsar magnetospheres. I. Linear polarization
C. T. Y. Chung, A. Melatos

TL;DR
This paper introduces Stokes phase portraits as a new diagnostic tool for analyzing pulsar radio polarization, providing more accurate insights into magnetic geometry and emission altitude than traditional PA swing analysis.
Contribution
It develops look-up tables of phase portraits for various magnetic and emission models, enhancing the interpretation of pulsar polarization data.
Findings
60% of pulsars show emission regions at higher altitudes
Data consistent with emission altitude >10% of light cylinder radius
Phase portraits complement PA swing analysis for better magnetic geometry inference
Abstract
Polarimetric studies of pulsar radio emission traditionally concentrate on how the Stokes vector (I, Q, U, V) varies with pulse longitude, with special emphasis on the position angle (PA) swing of the linearly polarized component. The interpretation of the PA swing in terms of the rotating vector model is limited by the assumption of an axisymmetric magnetic field and the degeneracy of the output with respect to the orientation and magnetic geometry of the pulsar; different combinations of the latter two properties can produce similar PA swings. This paper introduces Stokes phase portraits as a supplementary diagnostic tool with which the orientation and magnetic geometry can be inferred more accurately. The Stokes phase portraits feature unique patterns in the I-Q, I-U, and Q-U planes, whose shapes depend sensitively on the magnetic geometry, inclination angle, beam and polarization…
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