The pulsar spectral index distribution
Samuel D. Bates, Duncan R. Lorimer, Joris P. W. Verbiest

TL;DR
This study models the intrinsic distribution of pulsar spectral indices using survey data, revealing a Gaussian distribution centered at -1.4, and highlights how survey frequency biases affect observed pulsar spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a population synthesis approach to determine the pulsar spectral index distribution and assesses the impact of survey frequency on spectral index observations.
Findings
Spectral indices follow a Gaussian distribution with mean -1.4 and std dev 1.
High-frequency surveys favor flatter-spectrum pulsars.
At most 10% of pulsars have gigahertz-peaked spectra.
Abstract
The flux density spectra of radio pulsars are known to be steep and, to first order, described by a power-law relationship of the form S_{\nu} \propto \nu^{\alpha}, where S_{\nu} is the flux density at some frequency \nu and \alpha is the spectral index. Although measurements of \alpha have been made over the years for several hundred pulsars, a study of the intrinsic distribution of pulsar spectra has not been carried out. From the result of pulsar surveys carried out at three different radio frequencies, we use population synthesis techniques and a likelihood analysis to deduce what underlying spectral index distribution is required to replicate the results of these surveys. We find that in general the results of the surveys can be modelled by a Gaussian distribution of spectral indices with a mean of -1.4 and unit standard deviation. We also consider the impact of the so-called…
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