Understanding the Neutron Star Population with the SKAO telescopes
L. Levin, M. Bagchi, M. Burgay, A. T. Deller, V. Graber, A. Igoshev, M. Kramer, D. Lorimer, B. Posselt, T. Prabu, K. Rajwade, N. Rea, B. Stappers, T. M. Tauris, P. Weltevrede, and The SKAO Pulsar Science Working Group

TL;DR
The paper discusses how the SKAO telescopes will significantly expand our knowledge of neutron stars, uncovering new types and enabling advanced studies of their physics, evolution, and gravitational properties.
Contribution
It provides an overview of how SKAO will enhance neutron star research by increasing the known population and exploring diverse scientific questions.
Findings
SKAO will discover many new neutron stars across subgroups.
Enhanced data will improve understanding of neutron star evolution.
Potential for new physics insights from larger, more diverse samples.
Abstract
The known population of non-accreting neutron stars is ever growing and currently consists of more than 3500 sources. Pulsar surveys with the SKAO telescopes will greatly increase the known population, adding radio pulsars to every subgroup in the radio-loud neutron star family. These discoveries will not only add to the current understanding of neutron star physics by increasing the sample of sources that can be studied, but will undoubtedly also uncover previously unknown types of sources that will challenge our theories of a wide range of physical phenomena. A broad variety of scientific studies will be made possible by a significantly increased known population of neutron stars, unravelling questions such as: How do isolated pulsars evolve with time; What is the connection between magnetars, high B-field pulsars, and the newly discovered long-period pulsars; How is a pulsar's…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
