New Discoveries from the Arecibo 327 MHz Drift Pulsar Survey Radio Transient Search
J. S. Deneva, K. Stovall, M. A. McLaughlin, M. Bagchi, S. D. Bates, P., C. C. Freire, J. G. Martinez, F. Jenet, N. Garver-Daniels

TL;DR
This paper introduces Clusterrank, a new algorithm for detecting dispersed astrophysical pulses, leading to the discovery of new pulsars and RRATs, and providing insights into the pulsar population and FRB rates.
Contribution
The paper presents Clusterrank, a novel algorithm that enhances detection of dispersed pulses, uncovering previously underrepresented pulsars and RRATs in survey data.
Findings
Discovered 14 pulsars and 8 RRATs using Clusterrank.
Estimated an upper limit on the all-sky FRB rate of 10^5 per day.
Found that new RRATs share the same period distribution as known RRATs.
Abstract
We present Clusterrank, a new algorithm for identifying dispersed astrophysical pulses. Such pulses are commonly detected from Galactic pulsars and rotating radio transients (RRATs), which are neutron stars with sporadic radio emission. More recently, isolated, highly dispersed pulses dubbed fast radio bursts (FRBs) have been identified as the potential signature of an extragalactic cataclysmic radio source distinct from pulsars and RRATs. Clusterrank helped us discover 14 pulsars and 8 RRATs in data from the Arecibo 327 MHz Drift Pulsar Survey (AO327). The new RRATs have DMs in the range pc cm and periods in the range s. The new pulsars have DMs in the range pc cm and periods in the range s, and include two nullers and a mode-switching object. We estimate an upper limit on the all-sky FRB rate of …
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