Hitomi X-ray studies of Giant Radio Pulses from the Crab pulsar
Hitomi Collaboration, Felix Aharonian (1), Hiroki Akamatsu (2), Fumie, Akimoto (3), Steven W. Allen (4,5,6), Lorella Angelini (7), Marc Audard (8),, Hisamitsu Awaki (9), Magnus Axelsson (10), Aya Bamba (11,12), Marshall W., Bautz (13), Roger Blandford (4,5,6)

TL;DR
This study used simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of the Crab pulsar to search for correlated giant pulses, finding no significant correlation and setting upper limits on X-ray flux variations during radio giant pulses.
Contribution
First simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of the Crab pulsar to constrain correlations with giant radio pulses, providing new upper limits across multiple energy bands.
Findings
No significant correlation between X-ray and radio giant pulses.
Established upper limits on X-ray flux variations during giant radio pulses.
First constraints in the 4.5-10 keV and 70-300 keV bands.
Abstract
To search for giant X-ray pulses correlated with the giant radio pulses (GRPs) from the Crab pulsar, we performed a simultaneous observation of the Crab pulsar with the X-ray satellite Hitomi in the 2 -- 300 keV band and the Kashima NICT radio observatory in the 1.4 -- 1.7 GHz band with a net exposure of about 2 ks on 25 March 2016, just before the loss of the Hitomi mission.The timing performance of the Hitomi instruments was confirmed to meet the timing requirement and about 1,000 and 100 GRPs were simultaneously observed at the main and inter-pulse phases, respectively, and we found no apparent correlation between the giant radio pulses and the X-ray emission in either the main or inter-pulse phases.All variations are within the 2 sigma fluctuations of the X-ray fluxes at the pulse peaks, and the 3 sigma upper limits of variations of main- or inter- pulse GRPs are 22\% or 80\% of the…
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