Aqueye optical observations of the Crab Nebula pulsar
C. German\`a, L. Zampieri, C. Barbieri, G. Naletto, A. Cadez, M., Calvani, M. Barbieri, I. Capraro, A. Di Paola, C. Facchinetti, T. Occhipinti,, A. Possenti, D. Ponikvar, E. Verroi, P. Zoccarato

TL;DR
This study used high-precision optical observations of the Crab pulsar to measure its period, phase drift, and the lead of optical peak over radio, achieving unprecedented accuracy in a short time frame.
Contribution
First optical measurement of Crab pulsar's period and phase drift with picosecond accuracy, confirming optical lead over radio and demonstrating Aqueye's exceptional temporal resolution.
Findings
Measured pulsar period with 1.7 ps accuracy
Confirmed optical peak leads radio by ~230 microseconds
Data quality consistent with photon noise limits
Abstract
We observed the Crab pulsar in October 2008 at the Copernico Telescope in Asiago - Cima Ekar with the optical photon counter Aqueye (the Asiago Quantum Eye) which has the best temporal resolution and accuracy ever achieved in the optical domain (hundreds of picoseconds). Our goal was to perform a detailed analysis of the optical period and phase drift of the main peak of the Crab pulsar and compare it with the Jodrell Bank ephemerides. We determined the position of the main peak using the steepest zero of the cross-correlation function between the pulsar signal and an accurate optical template. The pulsar rotational period and period derivative have been measured with great accuracy using observations covering only a 2 day time interval. The error on the period is 1.7 ps, limited only by the statistical uncertainty. Both the rotational frequency and its first derivative are in agreement…
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