A search for radio pulsars and fast transients in M31 using the WSRT
E. Rubio-Herrera, B. W. Stappers, J. W. T. Hessels, R. Braun

TL;DR
This comprehensive survey of M31 using WSRT aimed to detect radio pulsars and transients, finding some single pulses possibly from extragalactic neutron stars, and constraining the pulsar luminosity function in M31.
Contribution
First deep, wide-field radio survey of M31 using WSRT's 8gr8 mode, searching for pulsars and transients, and constraining their population properties.
Findings
No confirmed periodic signals detected.
Several single pulse events observed, some possibly extragalactic.
Constraints on M31 pulsar luminosity function.
Abstract
We present the results of the most sensitive and comprehensive survey yet undertaken for radio pulsars and fast transients in the Andromeda galaxy (M31) and its satellites, using the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) at a central frequency of 328 MHz. We used the WSRT in a special configuration called 8gr8 (eight-grate) mode, which provides a large instantaneous field-of-view, about 5 square degrees per pointing, with good sensitivity, long dwell times (up to 8 hours per pointing), and good spatial resolution (a few arc minutes) for locating sources. We have searched for both periodicities and single pulses in our data, aiming to detect bright, persistent radio pulsars and rotating radio transients (RRATs) of either Galactic or extragalactic origin. Our searches did not reveal any confirmed periodic signals or bright single bursts from (potentially) cosmological distances.…
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