Long-term Radio Observations of the Intermittent Pulsar B1931+24
N. J. Young, B. W. Stappers, A. G. Lyne, P. Weltevrede, M. Kramer and, I. Cognard

TL;DR
This 13-year study of pulsar B1931+24 reveals stable emission cycles, distinct spin-down rates during active and null phases, and suggests magnetospheric switching as the underlying mechanism, with implications for future radio surveys.
Contribution
The paper provides the first long-term analysis of an intermittent pulsar, demonstrating stable emission cycles and magnetospheric state switching over many years.
Findings
Pulsar cycles between emission and null phases approximately every 38 days.
Spin-down rate differs significantly between emitting and null phases.
The pulsar is radio emitting about 26% of the observed time.
Abstract
We present an analysis of approximately 13-yr of observations of the intermittent pulsar B1931+24 to further elucidate its behaviour. We find that while the source exhibits a wide range of nulling (~4-39 d) and radio-emitting (~1-19 d) timescales, it cycles between its different emission phases over an average timescale of approximately 38 d, which is remarkably stable over many years. On average, the neutron star is found to be radio emitting for 26 +- 6 % of the time. No evidence is obtained to suggest that the pulsar undergoes any systematic, intrinsic variations in pulse intensity during the radio-emitting phases. In addition, we find no evidence for any correlation between the length of consecutive emission phases. An analysis of the rotational behaviour of the source shows that it consistently assumes the same spin-down rates, i.e. nudot = -16 +- 1 x 10^-15 s^-2 when emitting and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
