The first detection of a pulsar with ALMA
Roberto P. Mignani (1,2), Rosita Paladino (3), Bronek Rudak (4), Anna, Zajczyk (5), Alessandro Corongiu (6), Andrea de Luca (1), Wolfgang Hummel, (7), Andrea Possenti (6), Ulrich Geppert (2), Marta Burgay (6), Gianni, Marconi (8) ((1) INAF/IASF-Milano

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of a pulsar with ALMA, revealing that coherent emission extends into the millimeter/sub-millimeter range, bridging radio and high-energy observations and providing new insights into pulsar emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It presents the first ALMA detection of a pulsar at millimeter wavelengths, demonstrating coherent emission beyond radio frequencies and identifying a potential counter-jet structure.
Findings
Detected Vela pulsar at multiple ALMA frequencies with a power-law spectrum
Found high brightness temperatures indicating coherent emission at mm/sub-mm wavelengths
Identified a possible counter-jet structure associated with the pulsar
Abstract
Pulsars are neutron stars, stellar corpses left over after supernova explosions of stars about ten times as massive as our Sun, with densities comparable to the atomic nucleus', spinning with periods from few milliseconds up to few seconds, and endowed with magnetic fields thousands billion times stronger than the Earth's, where particles are accelerated to the relativistic regime producing electromagnetic radiation across the entire spectrum. Although there is a general consensus on the fact that pulsars' radio emission is coherent in nature, whereas the emission from the optical to high-energy -rays is due to incoherent processes, it has not been established yet at which wavelengths the transition occurs, a key information for all emission models of pulsar magnetospheres. Of course, to address this issue covering the spectral region between high-frequency radio waves and the…
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