The origin of the frequency-dependent behaviour of pulsar radio profiles
J. Dyks, B. Rudak

TL;DR
This paper proposes a pulsar emission model based on diverging streams forming fan-shaped beams, which explains various observed features like radius-to-frequency mapping and component lag without relying on traditional cone models.
Contribution
The study introduces a stream-based fan beam model that naturally accounts for pulsar profile features and challenges the traditional nested cone/core emission paradigm.
Findings
Explains radius-to-frequency mapping without emission rings.
Accounts for component lag without altitude differences.
Reproduces properties of both normal and millisecond pulsars.
Abstract
We present further development of a pulsar emission model based on multiple streams diverging away from the magnetic dipole axis, and forming azimuthally-structured fan-shaped beams. It is shown that this geometry, successfully tested on profiles with bifurcated features, naturally solves several classical pulsar problems and avoids some difficulties of the traditional nested cone/core model. This is best visible for profiles with several components, such as those of class T, Q and M, because they most clearly exhibit a range of effects previously interpreted within the conal model. In particular, with no reference to the flaring boundary of the polar magnetic flux tube, the stream model explains the apparent radius-to-frequency mapping (RFM), including its reduced strength for the inner pair of components. The lag of the central component (apparent `core') with respect to the centroids…
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