Science Using Single-Pulse Exploration with Combined Telescopes. I. The mode switching, flaring, and single-pulse morphology of PSR B1822-09
F. Jankowski (1), J.-M. Griessmeier (1, 2), M. Surnis (3), G., Theureau (1, 2, 4), J. Petri (5) ((1) CNRS & Paris Observatory, (2), Nancay Radio Observatory, (3) IISER Bhopal, (4) LUTH, (5) Strasbourg, University)

TL;DR
This study analyzes single-pulse phenomena of PSR B1822-09 across multiple frequencies, revealing mode switching, microstructure, and new emission modes to inform models of pulsar radio emission and fast radio bursts.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of PSR B1822-09's single-pulse behavior, including the discovery of a new bright flaring mode and insights into mode switching mechanisms.
Findings
Identified seven pulse profile components.
Discovered a new bright flaring Bf-mode.
Observed microstructure with 0.2-0.4 ms duration.
Abstract
Aims. We aim to elucidate the pulsar radio emission by studying several single-pulse phenomena, how they relate, and how they evolve with observing frequency. We intend to inspire models for the pulsar radio emission and fast radio bursts. Methods. We set up an observing programme called the SUSPECT project running at the Nancay Radio Observatory telescopes in France (10-85 MHz, 110-240 MHz, and 1.1-3.5GHz) and the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (uGMRT) in India. This first paper focuses on high sensitivity data of PSR B1822-09 obtained with the uGMRT between 550 and 750 MHz. The pulsar has precursor (PC), main pulse (MP), and interpulse (IP) emission and exhibits mode switching. We present its single-pulse stacks, investigate its mode switching using a hidden Markov switching model, and analyse its single-pulse morphology. Results. PSR B1822-09's pulse profile decomposes into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
