Long-term Timing Results of Ecliptic Pulsars Observed with I-LOFAR
S. C. Susarla, O. A. Johnson, D. J. McKenna, E. F. Keane, P. J. McCauley, J. P. W. Verbiest, C. Tiburzi, A. Golden

TL;DR
This study presents high-precision timing data for seven ecliptic pulsars observed with I-LOFAR over two to three years, revealing solar wind effects, pulse-profile variability, and ionospheric influences at low radio frequencies.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive dataset of pulsar timing and dispersion measures at low frequencies, highlighting solar wind impacts and intrinsic pulse variability in ecliptic pulsars.
Findings
DM variations depend on ecliptic latitude, indicating solar wind influence
Significant pulse width changes observed in some pulsars across frequencies
PSR J2145-0750's DM precision can resolve ionospheric contributions
Abstract
Pulsar timing at low frequencies offers a powerful tool for studying the interstellar medium. Additionally, pulsar observations in the ecliptic enables us to study the effects of the solar wind which becomes much more prominent at low radio frequencies. The Irish station of the LOw Frequency ARray (I-LOFAR) is a sensitive low-frequency radio telescope, capable of delivering high-precision data for pulsar studies. We present a comprehensive dataset of times-of-arrival, timing solutions and dispersion measure (DM) time series for seven ecliptic pulsars observed over two-to-three years with I-LOFAR. The primary objectives are to investigate time-dependent dispersion effects and provide high-precision timing data for pulsar timing experiments. We measure DM variations through pulsar timing and analysed these across different ecliptic latitudes to assess the impact of the solar wind on each…
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