Search for radio pulsations in LS I +61 303
A. Ca\~nellas, B. C. Joshi, J. M. Paredes, C. H. Ishwara-Chandra, J., Mold\'on, V. Zabalza, J. Mart\'i, and M. Rib\'o

TL;DR
This study conducted radio observations of LS I +61 303 to detect pulsations indicative of a pulsar, but found no signals, suggesting the pulsar, if present, is either not beamed or heavily absorbed.
Contribution
First targeted radio pulsation search in LS I +61 303, providing constraints on pulsar presence and emission properties in this gamma-ray binary system.
Findings
No pulsations detected with a sensitivity limit of ~0.38 mJy.
Detection may be hindered by beaming or absorption effects.
Future observations at different frequencies and orbital phases are needed.
Abstract
Context. LS I +61 303 is a member of the select group of gamma-ray binaries: galactic binary systems that contain a massive star and a compact object, show a changing milliarcsecond morphology and a similar broad spectral energy distribution (SED) that peaks at MeV-TeV energies and is modulated by the orbital motion. The nature of the compact object is unclear in LS I +61 303, LS 5039 and HESS J0632+057, whereas PSR B1259-63 harbours a 47.74 ms radio pulsar. Aims. A scenario in which a young pulsar wind interacts with the stellar wind has been proposed to explain the very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma-ray emission detected from LS I +61 303, although no pulses have been reported from this system at any wavelength. We aim to find evidence of the pulsar nature of the compact object. Methods. We performed phased array observations with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
