MeerTime - the MeerKAT Key Science Program on Pulsar Timing
M. Bailes, E. Barr, N. D. R. Bhat, J. Brink, S. Buchner, M. Burgay, F., Camilo, D. J. Champion, J. Hessels, G. H. Janssen, A. Jameson, S. Johnston,, A. Karastergiou, R. Karuppusamy, V. Kaspi, M. J. Keith, M. Kramer, M. A., McLaughlin, K. Moodley, S. Oslowski, A. Possenti

TL;DR
The MeerTime project utilizes the MeerKAT telescope's advanced capabilities to conduct a comprehensive five-year pulsar timing program, enabling tests of fundamental physics, gravitational wave detection, and neutron star studies with immediate public data access.
Contribution
This paper introduces the MeerTime pulsar timing program, detailing its technical setup, scientific goals, and the scope of data collection and public availability, advancing radio pulsar science.
Findings
Regular timing of over 1000 pulsars planned
Capability to coherently dedisperse multiple pulsars simultaneously
Data will be publicly available for broad scientific use
Abstract
The MeerKAT telescope represents an outstanding opportunity for radio pulsar timing science with its unique combination of a large collecting area and aperture efficiency (effective area 7500 m), system temperature (K), high slew speeds (1-2 deg/s), large bandwidths (770 MHz at 20cm wavelengths), southern hemisphere location (latitude ) and ability to form up to four sub-arrays. The MeerTime project is a five-year program on the MeerKAT array by an international consortium that will regularly time over 1000 radio pulsars to perform tests of relativistic gravity, search for the gravitational wave signature induced by supermassive black hole binaries in the timing residuals of millisecond pulsars, explore the interiors of neutron stars through a pulsar glitch monitoring programme, explore the origin and evolution of binary pulsars, monitor the swarms of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
