Discovery and follow-up of a quasiperiodically nulling and sub-pulse drifting pulsar with the Murchison Widefield Array
G. Grover, N.D.R. Bhat, S. McSweeney, C.P. Lee, B.W. Meyers, C.M. Tan, and S.S. Kudale

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a unique long-period pulsar exhibiting both quasi-periodic nulling and sub-pulse drifting, providing insights into pulsar emission physics and the nulling phenomenon.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a pulsar with combined nulling and sub-pulse drifting, discovered via the MWA survey, and discusses implications for pulsar emission models.
Findings
Nulling fraction of 34% with a periodicity of 42 pulses.
Measured sub-pulse phase ($P_2$) and modulation period ($P_3$).
The pulsar lies near the 'death valley' in the P-$ m extit{ extbf{P}}$ diagram.
Abstract
The phenomenon of pulsar nulling, where pulsars temporarily and stochastically cease their radio emission, is thought to be indicative of a `dying' pulsar, where radio emission ceases entirely. Here we report the discovery of a long-period pulsar, PSR J0452-3418, from the ongoing Southern-sky MWA Rapid Two-meter (SMART) pulsar survey. The pulsar has a rotation period of 1.67\,s and a dispersion measure of 19.8\,\dmu, and it exhibits both quasi-periodic nulling and sub-pulse drifting. Periodic nulling is uncommon, only reported in \% of the pulsar population, with even a smaller fraction showing periodic nulling and sub-pulse drifting. We describe the discovery and follow-up of the pulsar, including a positional determination using high-resolution imaging with the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (uGMRT), initial timing analysis using the combination of MWA and uGMRT…
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.
