The High Time Resolution Universe Pulsar Survey VIII: The Galactic millisecond pulsar population
L. Levin, M. Bailes, B. R. Barsdell, S. D. Bates, N. D. R. Bhat, M., Burgay, S. Burke-Spolaor, D. J. Champion, P. Coster, N. D'Amico, A. Jameson,, S. Johnston, M. J. Keith, M. Kramer, S. Milia, C. Ng, A. Possenti, B., Stappers, D. Thornton, W. van Straten

TL;DR
This study estimates the total population of millisecond pulsars in the Galaxy using survey data, modeling their luminosity distribution, and predicts the number of MSPs detectable in the southern HTRU survey.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive estimate of the Galactic MSP population using the scale factor method and incorporates updated luminosity measurements and scintillation effects.
Findings
Estimated total MSP population of approximately 83,000 sources.
Predicted detection of 78 new MSPs in the southern HTRU survey.
Luminosity distribution with a steep slope of -1.45, with uncertainties at low luminosities.
Abstract
We have used millisecond pulsars (MSPs) from the southern High Time Resolution Universe (HTRU) intermediate latitude survey area to simulate the distribution and total population of MSPs in the Galaxy. Our model makes use of the scale factor method, which estimates the ratio of the total number of MSPs in the Galaxy to the known sample. Using our best fit value for the z-height, z=500 pc, we find an underlying population of MSPs of 8.3(\pm 4.2)*10^4 sources down to a limiting luminosity of L_min=0.1 mJy kpc^2 and a luminosity distribution with a steep slope of d\log N/d\log L = -1.45(\pm 0.14). However, at the low end of the luminosity distribution, the uncertainties introduced by small number statistics are large. By omitting very low luminosity pulsars, we find a Galactic population above L_min=0.2 mJy kpc^2 of only 3.0(\pm 0.7)*10^4 MSPs. We have also simulated pulsars with periods…
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