The Pulsar Population in Globular Clusters and in the Galaxy
Paulo C. C. Freire

TL;DR
This paper reviews pulsar populations in globular clusters and the Galaxy, highlighting their formation, unique systems, and potential for revealing neutron star formation processes through observational evidence.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of pulsar populations in GCs and the Galaxy, emphasizing formation mechanisms and identifying unique pulsar systems as key evidence.
Findings
GC pulsars likely formed in symmetric supernovae and AIC.
Presence of eccentric MSPs indicates perturbations by passing stars.
Potential low-velocity neutron star population in the Galaxy.
Abstract
In this paper, I review some of the basic properties of the pulsar population in globular clusters (GCs) and compare it with the the Galactic disk population. The neutron stars (NSs) in GCs were likely formed - and appear to continue forming - in highly symmetric supernovae (SNe), likely from accretion-induced collapse (AIC). I review the many pulsar finds and discuss some particularly well populated GCs and why they are so. I then discuss some particularly interesting objects, like millisecond pulsars (MSPs) with eccentric orbits, which were heavily perturbed by passing stars. Some of these systems, like NGC 1851A and NGC 6544B, are almost certainly the result of exchange interactions, i.e., they are witnesses to the very same processes that created the large population of MSPs in the first place. I also review briefly the problem posed by the presence of young pulsars in GCs (with a…
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