Radiation by the superluminally moving current sheet in the magnetosphere of a neutron star
Houshang Ardavan

TL;DR
This paper models radiation from a superluminal current sheet in a neutron star's magnetosphere, explaining pulsar-like emissions with high brightness, polarization, and spectrum extending from radio to gamma rays.
Contribution
It introduces a novel calculation of radiation from a superluminal current sheet in neutron star magnetospheres, linking it to observed pulsar and burst phenomena.
Findings
Radiation consists of highly focused pulses with broad spectra.
Brightness temperature can exceed 10^40 K.
Flux density diminishes as D^(-3/2), not D^(-2).
Abstract
The mechanism by which the radiation received from obliquely rotating neutron stars is generated remains an open question half a century after the discovery of pulsars. In contrast, considerable progress has recently been made in determining the structure of the magnetosphere that surrounds these objects: numerical computations based on the force-free, magnetohydrodynamic and particle-in-cell formalisms have now established that the magnetosphere of an oblique rotator entails a current sheet outside its light cylinder whose rotating distribution pattern moves with linear speeds exceeding the speed of light in vacuum. Here we insert the description of the current sheet provided by the numerical simulations in the classical expression for the retarded potential and thereby calculate the radiation field generated by this source in the time domain. We find a radiation consisting of highly…
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