One blind and three targeted searches for (sub)millisecond pulsars
E. Davoust, G. Petit, T. Fayard

TL;DR
This study conducted multiple targeted and blind searches for millisecond and submillisecond pulsars using the Nancay radio telescope, but found no new pulsars, highlighting the challenges in detecting such objects with current methods.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive search strategy combining blind and targeted approaches, and evaluates the probability of detection, providing insights into the limitations of current pulsar surveys.
Findings
No new short-period pulsars were discovered.
Detection probability was 25% for the incomplete survey.
Higher sensitivity surveys have low practicality at transit instruments.
Abstract
We conducted one blind and three targeted searches for millisecond and submillisecond pulsars. The blind search was conducted within 3deg of the Galactic plane and at longitudes between 20 and 110deg. It takes 22073 pointings to cover this region, and 5487 different positions in the sky. The first targeted search was aimed at Galactic globular clusters, the second one at 24 bright polarized and pointlike radiosources with steep spectra, and the third at 65 faint polarized and pointlike radiosources. The observations were conducted at the large radiotelescope of Nancay Observatory, at a frequency near 1400 MHz. Two successive backends were used, first a VLBI S2 system, second a digital acquisition board and a PC with large storage capacity sampling the signal at 50 Mb/s on one bit, over a 24-MHz band and in one polarization. The bandwidth of acquisition of the second backend was later…
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