Title: What makes the Crab pulsar shine? Authors: J. A. Eilek, T. H. Hankins
Our high time resolution observations of individual pulses from the Crab pulsar show that the main pulse and interpulse differ in temporal behaviour, spectral behaviour, polarization and dispersion. The main pulse properties are consistent with one current model of pulsar radio emission, namely, soliton collapse in strong plasma turbulence. The high-frequency interpulse is quite another story. Its dynamic spectrum cannot easily be explained by any current emission model; its excess dispersion must come from propagation through the star's magnetosphere. We suspect the high-frequency interpulse does not follow the ``standard model'', but rather comes from some unexpected region within the star's magnetosphere. Similar observations of other pulsars will reveal whether the radio emission mechanisms operating in the Crab pulsar are unique to that star, or can be identified in the general population.
Title: Observations of the Crab Nebula with the Whipple 10 m Telescope Authors: VERITAS Collaboration: J. Grube
Due to the strong and steady TeV gamma-ray emission from the Crab Nebula supernova remnant, its measured flux and energy spectrum can be used to verify the calibration and data reduction methods applied to IACT data acquired over many observing seasons. This gives us confidence in the results obtained on variable TeV sources observed over the same period and in relating the sensitivity of new instruments to historical datasets. Here we present the results of an analysis of 65.3 hours of good quality data taken on the Crab Nebula between October 2000 and March 2006 with the Whipple 10m telescope. The total exposure resulted in a 46 sigma signal with 11886 selected excess events. The energy spectrum was best fit by a power law of the form dN/dE = (3.19 ± 0.07_stat) x 10^-11 (E/TeV)^(-2.64 ± 0.03_stat) cm² /s/TeV in the energy range 0.49--8 TeV. The systematic uncertainty in the flux was estimated to be 30%, with a systematic error of 0.2 in the photon index. A reasonable agreement is shown for a fit to a constant flux over the 6 years.
A new image of the Crab Nebula supernova remnant taken using the Prime Focus Camera (Suprime-Cam) on the Subaru telescope highlights the beauty of stellar debris expanding away from the site of this ancient blast. The high-resolution image captures details of an elongated tendril of gas rushing out at roughly 1,500 kilometres per second. While the nebula has been observed many times using both ground- and space-based telescopes, this image is giving astronomers another opportunity to study the mechanics of the expanding gas in much greater detail.
The neutron star inside the Crab Nebula may have four magnetic poles, rather than the usual two – unlike any other astronomical object known. The poles may have somehow been frozen into the neutron star when it was formed in a supernova explosion.
Because the primary pulse emission lasts just 0.4 nanoseconds, it may arise in an extremely small region just 12 centimetres across, where a cloud of plasma is trapped above the surface of the neutron star. If this conclusion is correct, the grapefruit-sized patch would be the tiniest individual object ever observed in astronomy.
Astronomers and physicists using the Cornell-managed Arecibo Telescope in Puerto Rico have discovered radio interpulses from the Crab Nebula pulsar that feature never-before-seen radio emission spectra. This leads scientists to speculate this could be the first cosmic object with a third magnetic pole.
"We never see the strange frequency structure in the main pulse and we never see the really short blasts in the interpulse. We fully expected the main pulse and interpulse to be spectrally identical, but what we found is that they are very different. This is the first time seeing this in a pulsar" - Tim Hankins, acting director of the Arecibo Observatory and a co-investigator on this research.
Bizarre emission spectrum leads to speculation: Is this a third magnetic pole? SEATTLE – Astronomers and physicists using the Cornell-managed Arecibo Telescope in Puerto Rico have discovered radio interpulses from the Crab Nebula pulsar that feature never-before-seen radio emission spectra. This leads scientists to speculate this could be the first cosmic object with a third magnetic pole.
"We never see the strange frequency structure in the main pulse and we never see the really short blasts in the interpulse. We fully expected the main pulse and interpulse to be spectrally identical, but what we found is that they are very different. This is the first time seeing this in a pulsar" - Tim Hankins, acting director of the Arecibo Observatory and a co-investigator on this research.
Hankins, who also is an emeritus professor of physics at New Mexico Tech in Socorro, N.M., will present a poster, "Radio Emission Signatures in the High Frequency Interpulse of the Crab Pulsar," which he made with Jean Eilek, New Mexico Tech professor of physics, on Jan. 8, 2007, at the American Astronomical Society (AAS) convention in Seattle.
"This is a cool result. The fact that the 'left hand' and the 'right hand' of the pulsar – or the north and south magnetic poles – don't know what each other is doing, is very striking. It knocks just about every existing theory of pulsar radio emission for a loop" - Jean Eilek.
Because pulses from north and south poles should be identical, Eilek thinks this strange radio emission might be coming from another part of the pulsar. She speculates: "Maybe we've discovered an unknown, unexpected 'third magnetic pole' somewhere else in the star."
Pulsars are important to understand as they allow physicists to confirm Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity. The magnetic and electrical fields of pulsars are far stronger than any laboratory can generate, and Hankins admits this is a difficult physics problem to understand. In the case of the Crab Nebula pulsar, located in the constellation Taurus, some 6,300 light years from Earth, the numbers boggle the mind: Plasma clouds in the pulsar's atmosphere send out the radio emission blasts in times as short as four-tenths of a nanosecond. This plasma cloud is smaller than a soccer ball. During their short lifetimes, their blasts of radio emission can be as powerful as 10 percent of the power of our sun
"These strange emission features are not showing up in other pulsars. Maybe the magnetic field is not as simple as we think. Right now, we're totally perplexed" -Jean Eilek.
The researchers have been using Arecibo on several observation occasions, between 2004 and the present. They last conducted observations in December 2006. New Mexico Tech students Jared Crossley, Eric Plum and James Sheckard assisted in this research. Cornell's National Astronomy and Ionosphere Centre manages Arecibo Observatory for the National Science Foundation, which funded this research.
Title: Echoes of Giant Pulses from the Crab Pulsar Authors: J. H. Crossley, J. A. Eilek, T. H. Hankins
We have detected occasional, short-lived ''echoes'' of giant pulses from the Crab pulsar. These echo events remind us of previously reported echoes from this pulsar, but they differ significantly in detail. Our echo events last at most only a few days; the echo emission lags the primary emission by only 40-100 musec. The echoes are consistently weaker and broader than the primary emission, and appear only at the lower of our two simultaneous observing frequencies. We suggest that these echoes are created by refraction in small plasma structures -- plasma clouds or magnetic flux ropes -- deep within the Crab nebula. If this is true, our echoes provide a new probe of small-scale structures within the inner synchrotron nebula.