Time series photopolarimetry and modelling of the white dwarf pulsar in AR Scorpii
Stephen B. Potter, David A. H. Buckley

TL;DR
This study presents detailed optical photo-polarimetric observations of the white dwarf pulsar AR Scorpii, revealing stable, repeatable polarized emission modulated by spin, beat, and orbital periods, and proposes a geometrical model based on synchrotron emission regions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a simple geometrical model explaining the polarimetric modulations through synchrotron emission from two regions on the white dwarf's magnetosphere, challenging previous assumptions about emission origins.
Findings
Polarized emission is stable and repeatable with modulations.
A geometrical model with two synchrotron regions explains the observations.
Previous models linking polarization to the M-dwarf are inconsistent with data.
Abstract
We present detailed optical photo-polarimetric observations of the recently-discovered white dwarf pulsar AR Scorpii. Our extensive dataset reveals that the polarized emission is remarkably stable and repeatable with spin, beat and orbital modulations. This has enabled us to construct a simple geometrical model which assumes that all of the optically polarized emission emanates from two diametrically opposed synchrotron emission regions on the white dwarf magnetosphere. We suggest that the observed polarimetric modulations occur as a result of an enhanced injection of relativistic electrons into the magnetosphere of the white dwarf as it sweeps past the M-dwarf. This leads to an increase in synchrotron emission as the injected electrons accelerate towards each magnetic mirror point close to the magnetic poles of the white dwarf. Whilst this scenario reproduces the detailed polarimetric…
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