A Giant Sample of Giant Pulses from the Crab Pulsar
Mitchell B. Mickaliger, Maura A. McLaughlin, Duncan R. Lorimer, Glen, I. Langston, Anna V. Bilous, Vlad I. Kondratiev, Maxim Lyutikov, Scott M., Ransom, and Nipuni Palliyaguru

TL;DR
This study presents the largest single-telescope sample of Crab pulsar giant pulses, analyzing their properties, frequency correlations, and testing magnetospheric emission theories through multi-frequency and gamma-ray correlations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, uniform analysis of nearly 95,000 GPs, including multi-frequency correlations and tests of emission mechanisms, which advances understanding of pulsar giant pulse phenomena.
Findings
Power-law amplitude distributions with indices 2.1-3.1 at 1.2 GHz.
Detected a small percentage of GPs at 8.9 GHz correlated with lower frequencies.
No significant correlation between GPs and gamma-ray photons.
Abstract
We observed the Crab pulsar with the 43-m telescope in Green Bank, WV over a timespan of 15 months. In total we obtained 100 hours of data at 1.2 GHz and seven hours at 330 MHz, resulting in a sample of about 95000 giant pulses (GPs). This is the largest sample, to date, of GPs from the Crab pulsar taken with the same telescope and backend and analyzed as one data set. We calculated power-law fits to amplitude distributions for main pulse (MP) and interpulse (IP) GPs, resulting in indices in the range of 2.1-3.1 for MP GPs at 1.2 GHz and in the range of 2.5-3.0 and 2.4-3.1 for MP and IP GPs at 330 MHz. We also correlated the GPs at 1.2 GHz with GPs from the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT), which were obtained simultaneously at a higher frequency (8.9 GHz) over a span of 26 hours. In total, 7933 GPs from the 43-m telescope at 1.2 GHz and 39900 GPs from the GBT were recorded…
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