Pulsars in Globular Clusters With the SKAO
Manjari Bagchi, Federico Abbate, Vishnu Balakrishnan, Miquel Colom i Bernadich, Bhaswati Bhattacharyya, Arunima Dutta, Paulo C. C. Freire, Kriisa Halley, Jason W. T. Hessels, Sangeeta Kumari, Duncan R. Lorimer, Andrea Possenti, Rouhin Nag, Scott M. Ransom, Alessandro Ridolfi

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of the SKAO telescope to significantly increase the discovery of pulsars in globular clusters, which are valuable for studying dense matter, stellar evolution, and galactic dynamics.
Contribution
It provides predictions for the number of pulsars that SKAO can detect in globular clusters, highlighting the early science opportunities and scientific impact.
Findings
Deep SKAO searches can discover new pulsars during early commissioning.
SKAO could more than double the current known pulsar population in globular clusters.
Predicted detection of up to 1700 pulsars with full SKAO capabilities.
Abstract
Because of their extreme stellar densities, globular clusters are highly efficient factories of X-ray binaries and radio pulsars: per unit of stellar mass, they contain about 1000 times more of these exotic objects. Thus far, 345 radio pulsars have been found in globular clusters. These can be used as precision probes of the structure, gas content, magnetic field, and dynamic history of their host clusters; some of them are also highly interesting in their own right because they probe exotic stellar evolution scenarios as well as the physics of dense matter, accretion, and gravity; one of them (PSR~J05144002E) might even be the first pulsar - black hole system known. Deep searches with SKA-MID and SKA-LOW will only require one to a few tied-array beams, and can be done during early commissioning of the telescope, before an all-sky pulsar survey using hundreds to thousands of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
