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A long-period radio transient active for three decades: population study in the neutron star and white dwarf rotating dipole scenarios
- Publication Year :
- 2023
- Publisher :
- arXiv, 2023.
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Abstract
- The nature of two recently discovered radio emitters with unusually long periods of 18min (GLEAM-X J1627-52) and 21min (GPM J1839-10) is highly debated. Their bright radio emission resembles that of radio magnetars, but their long periodicities and lack of detection at other wavelengths challenge the neutron-star interpretation. In contrast, long rotational periods are common in white dwarfs but, although predicted, dipolar radio emission from isolated magnetic white dwarfs has never been unambiguously observed. In this work, we investigate these long-period objects as potential isolated neutron-star or white-dwarf dipolar radio emitters and find that both scenarios pose significant challenges to our understanding of radio emission via pair production in dipolar magnetospheres. We also perform population-synthesis simulations based on dipolar spin-down in both pictures, assuming different initial-period distributions, masses, radii, beaming fractions, and magnetic-field prescriptions, to assess their impact on the ultra-long pulsar population. In the neutron-star scenario, we cannot reproduce the large number of expected ultra-long period pulsars under any physically motivated (or even extreme) assumptions. Thus, if GLEAM-X J1627-52 and GPM J1839-10 are confirmed as neutron-star pulsars (even if they are magnetars), this would necessarily call for a significant revision of our understanding of birth parameters at the population level. On the other hand, in the white-dwarf scenario, no mechanism can explain the production of such a bright coherent radio emission in isolated magnetic white dwarf systems (binaries with low mass companions are still viable), although we can easily accommodate a large population of long-period radio emitters.<br />Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; ApJ Letters submitted
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f58246918dd329829ad7a5ff7802989b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2307.10351