Characterization of the Crab Pulsar's Timing Noise
D. Matthew Scott, Mark H. Finger, Colleen A. Wilson (NSSTC, MSFC)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the Crab pulsar's timing noise using advanced spectral methods, revealing a 568-day periodic component and a steep red noise spectrum, challenging previous models and suggesting a possible low-mass binary companion.
Contribution
It introduces a windowing method for power spectral analysis of red noise in irregularly sampled pulsar data and applies it to identify new features in the Crab pulsar's timing noise.
Findings
Detected a ~568-day periodic component in timing residuals.
Found a 1/f^3 red noise component with specific noise strength.
Suggested a possible low-mass binary companion based on periodicity.
Abstract
We present a power spectral analysis of the Crab pulsar's timing noise, mainly using radio measurements from Jodrell Bank taken over the period 1982-1989. The power spectral analysis is complicated by nonuniform data sampling and the presence of a steep red power spectrum that can distort power spectra measurement by causing severe power ``leakage''. We develop a simple windowing method for computing red noise power spectra of uniformly sampled data sets and test it on Monte Carlo generated sample realizations of red power-law noise. We generalize time-domain methods of generating power-law red noise with even integer spectral indices to the case of noninteger spectral indices. The Jodrell Bank pulse phase residuals are dense and smooth enough that an interpolation onto a uniform time series is possible. A windowed power spectrum is computed revealing a periodic or nearly periodic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · GNSS positioning and interference
