PSRs J0248+6021 and J2240+5832: Young Pulsars in the Northern Galactic Plane. Discovery, Timing, and Gamma-ray observations
G. Theureau, D. Parent, I. Cognard, G. Desvignes, D. A. Smith, J. M., Casandjian, C. C. Cheung, H. A. Craig, D. Donato, R. Foster, L. Guillemot, A., K. Harding, J.-F. Lestrade, P. S. Ray, R. W. Romani, D. J. Thompson, W. W., Tian, K. Watters

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed timing and gamma-ray observations of two young pulsars in the northern Galactic plane, analyzing their emission properties and comparing them with theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of PSR J0248+6021 and J2240+5832, revealing their emission characteristics and implications for pulsar magnetosphere models.
Findings
Both pulsars exhibit a single gamma-ray pulse offset from the radio peak.
Gamma-ray luminosities are consistent with the sqrt(Edot) relation.
Emission likely originates from the far magnetosphere.
Abstract
Pulsars PSR J0248+6021 (rotation period P=217 ms and spin-down power Edot = 2.13E35 erg/s) and PSR J2240+5832 (P=140 ms, Edot = 2.12E35 erg/s) were discovered in 1997 with the Nancay radio telescope during a northern Galactic plane survey, using the Navy-Berkeley Pulsar Processor (NBPP) filter bank. GeV gamma-ray pulsations from both were discovered using the Fermi Large Area Telescope. Twelve years of radio and polarization data allow detailed investigations. The two pulsars resemble each other both in radio and in gamma-ray data. Both are rare in having a single gamma-ray pulse offset far from the radio peak. The high dispersion measure for PSR J0248+6021 (DM = 370 pc cm^-3) is most likely due to its being within the dense, giant HII region W5 in the Perseus arm at a distance of 2 kpc, not beyond the edge of the Galaxy as obtained from models of average electron distributions. Its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Superconducting Materials and Applications
