Searching for pulsars associated with polarised point sources using LOFAR: Initial discoveries from the TULIPP project
C. Sobey, C. G. Bassa, S. P. O'Sullivan, J. R. Callingham, C. M. Tan,, J. W. T. Hessels, V. I. Kondratiev, B. W. Stappers, C. Tiburzi, G. Heald, T., Shimwell, R. P. Breton, M. Kirwan, H. K. Vedantham, Ettore Carretti, J. -M., Grie{\ss}meier, M. Haverkorn, A. Karastergiou

TL;DR
This paper reports the initial results of the TULIPP project, which uses LOFAR low-frequency radio images to identify polarised point sources and discover new pulsars, including millisecond pulsars, through targeted observations and pulsation searches.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel targeted survey method leveraging polarised radio sources in LOFAR images to efficiently discover pulsars, especially MSPs, which are hard to find with traditional surveys.
Findings
Discovered two new pulsars, including a millisecond pulsar.
Detected five known pulsars with previously unknown positions.
Demonstrated the effectiveness of polarisation-based targeted searches for pulsar discovery.
Abstract
Discovering radio pulsars, particularly millisecond pulsars (MSPs), is important for a range of astrophysical applications, such as testing theories of gravity or probing the magneto-ionic interstellar medium. We aim to discover pulsars that may have been missed in previous pulsar searches by leveraging known pulsar observables (primarily polarisation) in the sensitive, low-frequency radio images from the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS), and have commenced the Targeted search, using LoTSS images, for polarised pulsars (TULIPP) survey. For this survey, we identified linearly and circularly polarised point sources with flux densities brighter than 2 mJy in LoTSS images at a centre frequency of 144 MHz with a 48 MHz bandwidth. Over 40 known pulsars, half of which are MSPs, were detected as polarised sources in the LoTSS images and excluded from the survey. We have…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
