Searching for pulsars in the Galactic Centre at 3 and 2 mm
Pablo Torne, Gregory Desvignes, Ralph Eatough, Michael Kramer, Ramesh, Karuppusamy, Kuo Liu, Aris Noutsos, Robert Wharton, Carsten Kramer, Santiago, Navarro, Gabriel Paubert, Salvador Sanchez, Miguel Sanchez-Portal, Karl, Schuster, Heino Falcke, Luciano Rezzolla

TL;DR
This paper reports the first high-frequency millimetre-wave pulsar survey in the Galactic centre, demonstrating the potential and challenges of such surveys for discovering pulsars unaffected by scattering.
Contribution
It introduces a novel millimetre-wave pulsar survey at 84-156 GHz targeting the Galactic centre, showing its unbiased nature and analyzing its sensitivity limits.
Findings
No new pulsars detected, likely due to decreased flux at high frequencies.
Survey demonstrates high-frequency observations can potentially discover pulsars in the Galactic centre.
Highlights challenges and future improvements for millimetre-wave pulsar surveys.
Abstract
Pulsars in the Galactic centre promise to enable unparalleled tests of gravity theories and black hole physics and to serve as probes of the stellar formation history and evolution and the interstellar medium in the complex central region of the Milky Way. The community has surveyed the innermost region of the galaxy for decades without detecting a population of pulsars, which is puzzling. A strong scattering of the pulsed signals in this particular direction has been argued to be a potential reason for the non-detections. Scattering has a strong inverse dependence on observing frequency, therefore an effective way to alleviate its effect is to use higher frequencies in a survey for pulsars in the Galactic centre, in particular, close to the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*. We present the first pulsar survey at short millimetre wavelengths, using several frequency bands between…
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