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The Low-Frequency Radio Eclipses of the Black Widow Pulsar J1810+1744

Authors :
Polzin, E. J.
Breton, R. P.
Clarke, A. O.
Kondratiev, V. I.
Stappers, B. W.
Hessels, J. W. T.
Bassa, C. G.
Broderick, J. W.
Grießmeier, J. -M.
Sobey, C.
ter Veen, S.
van Leeuwen, J.
Weltevrede, P.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We have observed and analysed the eclipses of the black widow pulsar J1810+1744 at low radio frequencies. Using LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR) and Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope observations between 2011--2015 we have measured variations in flux density, dispersion measure and scattering around eclipses. High-time-resolution, simultaneous beamformed and interferometric imaging LOFAR observations show concurrent disappearance of pulsations and total flux from the source during the eclipses, with a $3\sigma$ upper limit of 36 mJy ($<10\%$ of the pulsar's averaged out-of-eclipse flux density). The dispersion measure variations are highly asymmetric, suggesting a tail of material swept back due to orbital motion. The egress deviations are variable on timescales shorter than the 3.6 hr orbital period and are indicative of a clumpy medium. Additional pulse broadening detected during egress is typically $<20\%$ of the pulsar's spin period, showing no evidence of scattering the pulses beyond detectability in the beamformed data. The eclipses, lasting $\sim13\%$ of the orbit at 149 MHz, are shown to be frequency-dependent with total duration scaling as $\propto\nu^{-0.41\pm0.03}$. The results are discussed in the context of the physical parameters of the system, and an examination of eclipse mechanisms reveals cyclotron-synchrotron absorption as the most likely primary cause, although non-linear scattering mechanisms cannot be quantitatively ruled out. The inferred mass loss rate is a similar order-of-magnitude to the mean rate required to fully evaporate the companion in a Hubble time.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1802.02594
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty349