Radio detection prospects for a bulge population of millisecond pulsars as suggested by Fermi LAT observations of the inner Galaxy
Francesca Calore, Mattia Di Mauro, Fiorenza Donato, Jason W.T., Hessels, Christoph Weniger

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential for detecting millisecond pulsars in the Galactic bulge through upcoming radio surveys, motivated by gamma-ray observations suggesting a large MSP population near the Galactic center.
Contribution
It demonstrates that future large-area and targeted radio surveys could detect dozens of bulge MSPs, supporting the MSP origin of the Fermi GeV excess.
Findings
Upcoming surveys can detect dozens of bulge MSPs.
Deep targeted searches may find the first bulge MSPs.
Gamma-ray/radio correlation enhances detection prospects.
Abstract
Analogously to globular clusters, the dense stellar environment of the Galactic center has been proposed to host a large population of as-yet undetected millisecond pulsars (MSPs). Recently, this hypothesis found support in the analysis of gamma rays from the inner Galaxy seen by the Large Area Telescope (LAT) aboard the Fermi satellite, which revealed a possible excess of diffuse GeV photons in the inner 15 deg about the Galactic center (Fermi GeV excess). The excess can be interpreted as the collective emission of thousands of MSPs in the Galactic bulge, with a spherical distribution that strongly peaks towards the Galactic center. In order to fully establish the MSP interpretation, it is essential to find corroborating evidence in multi-wavelength searches, most notably through the detection of radio pulsation from individual bulge MSPs. Based on globular cluster observations and the…
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