Phase-locked modulation delay between the poles of pulsar B1055-52
Patrick Weltevrede, Geoff Wright, Simon Johnston

TL;DR
This study reveals complex, phase-locked modulation patterns in pulsar B1055-52's single pulses, with a notable delay between poles, challenging existing emission models and suggesting intricate underlying mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of phase-locked modulation delays between the pulsar's poles and examines various models explaining these phenomena.
Findings
A ~20P periodicity dominates the modulation.
A 2.5P phase-locked delay exists between main pulse and interpulse.
Total pulse intensity distributions are similar despite modulation disparities.
Abstract
We present a detailed single pulse study of PSR B1055-52 based on observations at the Parkes radio telescope. The radio emission is found to have a complex modulation dominated by a periodicity of ~20 times its rotational period P (0.197s), whose phase and strength depends on pulse longitude. This periodicity exhibits a phase-locked delay of about 2.5P between the main pulse (MP) and interpulse (IP), presumed to be the opposite poles of the pulsar. This delay corresponds to a light travel distance of many times the light cylinder radius. More complex modulations are found within the MP on timescales down to about 9P, and both these and the principal modulation vary strongly across the (at least) 7 components which the MP and IP exhibit. The nature of the single pulse emission, which ranges from smooth and longitudinally extended to `spiky', is also component-dependent. Despite these…
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