# Radio pulsar polarization as a coherent sum of orthogonal proper mode   waves

**Authors:** J. Dyks

arXiv: 1902.11141 · 2019-06-26

## TL;DR

This paper explains complex radio pulsar polarization phenomena as resulting from the coherent sum of natural mode waves, revealing that observed polarization tracks can deviate from traditional models due to phase and amplitude variations.

## Contribution

It introduces a geometrical model of pulsar polarization based on coherent addition of elliptically polarized natural mode waves, explaining deviations from the rotating vector model.

## Key findings

- Observed polarization tracks can wander far from the RVM.
- Two orthogonal polarization modes can appear depending on phase lag.
- Frequency evolution of polarization features is mainly due to phase lag changes.

## Abstract

Radio pulsar polarization exhibits a number of complex phenomena that are classified into the realm of `beyond the rotating vector model' (RVM). It is shown that these effects can be understood in geometrical terms, as a result of coherent and quasi-coherent addition of elliptically polarized natural mode waves. The coherent summation implies that the observed tracks of polarization angle (PA) do not always correspond to the natural propagation mode (NPM) waves. Instead, they are statistical average of coherent sum of the NPM waves, and can be observed at any (and frequency-dependent) distance from the natural modes. Therefore, the observed tracks of PA can wander arbitrarily far from the RVM, and may be non-orthogonal. For equal amplitudes of the NPM waves two pairs of orthogonal polarization modes (OPMs), displaced by 45 deg, can be observed, depending on the width of lag distribution. Observed pulsar polarization mainly results from two independent effects: the change of mode amplitude ratio and the change of phase lag. In the core region both effects are superposed on each other, which can produce so complex behaviour as observed in the cores of PSR B1933+16, B1237+25 and J0437-4715. Change of the phase lag with frequency $\nu$ is mostly responsible for the observed strong evolution of these features with $\nu$. The coherent addition of orthogonal natural waves is a useful interpretive tool for the observed radio pulsar polarization.

## Full text

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## Figures

29 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.11141/full.md

## References

29 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.11141/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.11141