The LOFAR Pilot Surveys for Pulsars and Fast Radio Transients
Thijs Coenen (1,2), Joeri van Leeuwen (2,1), Jason W. T. Hessels, (2,1), Ben W. Stappers (3), Vladislav I. Kondratiev (2), A. Alexov, R. P., Breton, A. Bilous, S. Cooper, H. Falcke, R. A. Fallows, V. Gajjar, J.-M., Grie{\ss}meier, T. E. Hassall, A. Karastergiou, E. F. Keane

TL;DR
This paper reports on LOFAR pilot surveys that discovered two new pulsars, set limits on fast radio burst rates at low frequencies, and demonstrate LOFAR's capability for all-sky pulsar and transient surveys.
Contribution
The study introduces two LOFAR pilot surveys that successfully detected new pulsars and established low-frequency fast radio burst limits, showcasing LOFAR's survey potential.
Findings
Discovered two new pulsars with LOFAR.
Set an upper limit of 150 fast radio bursts per day per sky at 142 MHz.
Re-detected 92 known pulsars in total.
Abstract
We have conducted two pilot surveys for radio pulsars and fast transients with the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) around 140 MHz and here report on the first low-frequency fast-radio burst limit and the discovery of two new pulsars. The first survey, the LOFAR Pilot Pulsar Survey (LPPS), observed a large fraction of the northern sky, ~1.4 x 10^4 sq. deg, with 1-hr dwell times. Each observation covered ~75 sq. deg using 7 independent fields formed by incoherently summing the high-band antenna fields. The second pilot survey, the LOFAR Tied-Array Survey (LOTAS), spanned ~600 sq. deg, with roughly a 5-fold increase in sensitivity compared with LPPS. Using a coherent sum of the 6 LOFAR "Superterp" stations, we formed 19 tied-array beams, together covering 4 sq. deg per pointing. From LPPS we derive a limit on the occurrence, at 142 MHz, of dispersed radio bursts of < 150 /day/sky, for bursts…
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