Resolving the Emission Regions of the Crab Pulsar's Giant Pulses II. Evidence for Relativistic Motion
Rebecca Lin, Marten H. van Kerkwijk, Robert Main, Nikhil Mahajan,, Ue-Li Pen, Franz Kirsten

TL;DR
This study uses VLBI observations of the Crab Pulsar's giant pulses to resolve their emission regions, revealing sizes suggesting relativistic plasma motion, which impacts understanding of pulsar emission mechanisms and potentially other fast radio phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first direct resolution of the emission regions of Crab Pulsar's giant pulses and evidence for relativistic motion of the emitting plasma.
Findings
Emission regions are resolved with diameters of ~2000 km.
Evidence suggests plasma moves relativistically with gamma~10^4.
Emission region extends along the line of sight by ~10^7 km.
Abstract
The Crab Pulsar is the prime example of an emitter of giant pulses. These short, very bright pulses are thought to originate near the light cylinder, at from the pulsar. The pulsar's location inside the Crab Nebula offers an unusual opportunity to resolve the emission regions, using the nebula, which scatters radio waves, as a lens. We attempt to do this using a sample of 61998 giant pulses found in coherently combined European VLBI network observations at . These were taken at times of relatively strong scattering and hence good effective resolution, and from correlations between pulse spectra, we show that the giant pulse emission regions are indeed resolved. We infer apparent diameters of and for the main and interpulse components, respectively, and show that with these sizes the correlation amplitudes and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
