The SUrvey for Pulsars and Extragalactic Radio Bursts IV: Discovery and polarimetry of a 12.1-second radio pulsar
V. Morello, E.F. Keane, T. Enoto, S. Guillot, W.C.G. Ho, A. Jameson,, M. Kramer, B.W. Stappers, M. Bailes, E.D. Barr, S. Bhandari, M. Caleb, C.M.L., Flynn, F. Jankowski, S. Johnston, W. van Straten, Z. Arzoumanian, S., Bogdanov, K.C. Gendreau, C. Malacaria, P.S. Ray

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and polarimetric analysis of PSR J2251-3711, a rare 12.1-second pulsar, providing insights into its properties, polarization behavior, and potential neutron star classification, with implications for understanding neutron star evolution.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed polarimetric study of a 12.1-second pulsar, expanding knowledge of long-period pulsars and their emission characteristics.
Findings
Discovered a 12.1-second radio pulsar with unique polarization features.
Observed phase-resolved polarization angle swings with unusual phase variability.
Placed upper limits on X-ray emission, suggesting a possible older neutron star or magnetar.
Abstract
We report the discovery of PSR~J22513711, a radio pulsar with a spin period of 12.1 seconds, the second longest currently known. Its timing parameters imply a characteristic age of 15 Myr, a surface magnetic field of ~G and a spin-down luminosity of . Its dispersion measure of 12.12(1)~ leads to distance estimates of 0.5 and 1.3 kpc according to the NE2001 and YMW16 Galactic free electron density models, respectively. Some of its single pulses show an uninterrupted 180 degree sweep of the phase-resolved polarization position angle, with an S-shape reminiscent of the rotating vector model prediction. However, the fact that this sweep occurs at different phases from one pulse to another is remarkable and without straightforward explanation. Although PSR~J22513711 lies in the region of the…
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