Discovery of an Energetic Pulsar Associated with SNR G76.9+1.0
Z. Arzoumanian, E. V. Gotthelf, S. M. Ransom, S. Safi-Harb, R. Kothes,, T. L. Landecker

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a highly energetic, young pulsar associated with SNR G76.9+1.0, providing insights into its properties, emission mechanisms, and its significance among Galactic pulsars.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detection and detailed characterization of PSR J2022+3842, a remarkably energetic and rapidly rotating young pulsar, expanding knowledge of pulsar energetics and emission.
Findings
PSR J2022+3842 is the second-most energetic Galactic pulsar.
The pulsar exhibits a large spin glitch between observations.
It has a low X-ray efficiency despite high energy output.
Abstract
We report the discovery of PSR J2022+3842, a 24 ms radio and X-ray pulsar in the supernova remnant G76.9+1.0, in observations with the Chandra X-ray telescope, the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Radio Telescope, and the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). The pulsar's spin-down rate implies a rotation-powered luminosity Edot = 1.2 x 10^{38} erg/s, a surface dipole magnetic field strength B_s = 1.0 x 10^{12} G, and a characteristic age of 8.9 kyr. PSR J2022+3842 is thus the second-most energetic Galactic pulsar known, after the Crab, as well as the most rapidly-rotating young, radio-bright pulsar known. The radio pulsations are highly dispersed and broadened by interstellar scattering, and we find that a large (delta-f / f ~= 1.9 x 10^{-6}) spin glitch must have occurred between our discovery and confirmation observations. The X-ray pulses are narrow (0.06 cycles FWHM) and visible up to 20…
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