Population study for gamma-ray pulsars; II Millisecond pulsars
J. Takata, Y. Wang, K.S. Cheng (The University of Hong Kong)

TL;DR
This study uses Monte-Carlo simulations to model the population of gamma-ray millisecond pulsars in the Galaxy, predicting detection numbers for Fermi and explaining the nature of unidentified gamma-ray sources.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed population model for gamma-ray MSPs incorporating viewing angles and emission models, predicting detection rates and source characteristics.
Findings
Fermi is expected to detect 15-22 radio-selected MSPs over 5 years.
Most gamma-ray MSPs remain undetected by current surveys.
High-latitude unidentified sources are likely MSPs, while galactic plane sources are mostly radio-quiet pulsars.
Abstract
The population of -ray emitting millisecond pulsars (MSPs) is studied by using Monte-Carlo techniques. We simulate the Galactic distributions of the MSPs, and apply the outer gap model for the -ray emission from each simulated MSP. We take into account the dependence of the observed -ray flux on the viewing angle and inclination angle, which is the angle between the rotation axis and the magnetic axis, respectively. Using the sensitivity of the six-month long observation of the telescope and radio sensitivities of existing pulsar surveys, 9-13 radio-selected and 22-35 -ray-selected pulsars are detected within our simulation. The statistical properties of the simulated population are consistent with the observations. Scaling the observed sensitivity , where is the length of observation time, the present model predicts…
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