Small glitches and other rotational irregularities of the Vela pulsar
C. M. Espinoza, D. Antonopoulou, R. Dodson, M. Stepanova, A. Scherer

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rotational irregularities of the Vela pulsar, identifying two new glitches and numerous small events, revealing insights into its glitching behavior and timing noise over several decades.
Contribution
It presents the first automated systematic search for small glitches in Vela, discovering two new glitches and characterizing the pulsar's continuous activity affecting its spin-down.
Findings
Identified two new glitches with sizes ~5.55e-9 and 38e-9
Detected numerous small events contributing to timing noise
Vela shows an under-abundance of small glitches compared to other pulsars
Abstract
Glitches are sudden increases in the rotation rate of neutron stars, which are thought to be driven by the neutron superfluid inside the star. The Vela pulsar presents a comparatively high rate of glitches, with 21 events reported since observations began in 1968. These are amongst the largest known glitches (17 of them have sizes ) and exhibit very similar characteristics. This similarity, combined with the regularity with which large glitches occur, has turned Vela into an archetype of this type of glitching behaviour. The properties of its smallest glitches, on the other hand, are not clearly established. High-cadence observations of the Vela pulsar were taken between 1981 and 2005 at the Mount Pleasant Radio Observatory. An automated systematic search was carried out that investigated whether a significant change of spin frequency and/or the…
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