ID: astro-ph/0411160

The Millisecond Pulsars in NGC 6760

November 6, 2004

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Eight new MSPs in NGC 6440 and NGC 6441

November 13, 2007

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Paulo C. C. Freire, Scott M. Ransom, Steve Begin, Ingrid H. Stairs, Jason W. T. Hessels, ... , Camilo Fernando
Astrophysics

We report the discovery of five new millisecond pulsars in the globular cluster NGC 6440 and three new ones in NGC 6441; each cluster has one previously known pulsar. Four of the new pulsars are found in binary systems. One of the new pulsars, PSR J1748-2021B in NGC 6440, is notable for its eccentric (e = 0.57) and wide (P_b = 20.5 days) orbit. If the rate of advance of periastron is due solely to general relativity, we can estimate of the total mass of this binary system: 2....

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A 20-cm Survey for Pulsars in Globular Clusters using the GBT and Arecibo

April 9, 2004

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Scott McGill/MIT Ransom, Jason McGill Hessels, Ingrid UBC Stairs, Victoria McGill/MIT Kaspi, ... , Backer Donald Berkeley
Astrophysics

We have been conducting deep searches at ~20 cm of >30 globular clusters (GCs) using the 305-m Arecibo telescope in Puerto Rico and the 100-m Green Bank telescope (GBT) in West Virginia. With roughly 80% of our search data analyzed, we have confirmed 13 new millisecond pulsars (MSPs), 12 of which are in binary systems, and at least three of which eclipse. We currently have timing solutions for five of these systems and basic orbital and spin parameters for six others.

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A 1.4-GHz Arecibo Survey for Pulsars in Globular Clusters

July 11, 2007

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J. W. T. Univ. of Amsterdam/McGill Hessels, S. M. NRAO Ransom, I. H. UBC Stairs, ... , Freire P. C. C. NAIC
Astrophysics

We have surveyed all 22 known Galactic globular clusters observable with the Arecibo radio telescope and within 70kpc of the Sun for radio pulsations at ~1.4GHz. Data were taken with the Wideband Arecibo Pulsar Processor, which provided the large bandwidth and high time and frequency resolution needed to detect fast-spinning, faint pulsars. We have also employed advanced search techniques to maintain sensitivity to short orbital period binaries. These searches have discovered...

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A Highly Eccentric 3.9-Millisecond Binary Pulsar in the Globular Cluster NGC 6652

June 10, 2015

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Megan E. DeCesar, Scott M. Ransom, David L. Kaplan, ... , Geller Aaron M.
High Energy Astrophysical Ph...

We present the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope discovery of the highly eccentric binary millisecond pulsar PSR J1835$-$3259A in the Fermi Large Area Telescope-detected globular cluster NGC 6652. Timing over one orbit yields the pulse period 3.89 ms, orbital period 9.25 d, eccentricity $\sim 0.95$, and an unusually high companion mass of $0.74\,M_{\odot}$ assuming a $1.4\,M_{\odot}$ pulsar. We caution that the lack of data near periastron prevents a precise measurement of ...

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Discovery of short-period binary millisecond pulsars in four globular clusters

October 13, 2000

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N. D'Amico, A. G. Lyne, R. N. Manchester, ... , Camilo F.
Astrophysics

We report the discovery using the Parkes radio telescope of binary millisecond pulsars in four clusters for which no associated pulsars were previously known. The four pulsars have pulse periods lying between 3 and 6 ms. All are in circular orbits with low-mass companions and have orbital periods of a few days or less. One is in a 1.7-hour orbit with a companion of planetary mass. Another is eclipsed by a wind from its companion for 40% of the binary period despite being in a...

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Discovery of Two New Pulsars in 47 Tucanae (NGC 104)

March 4, 2016

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Zhichen Pan, George Hobbs, Di Li, Alessandro Ridolfi, ... , Freire Paulo
High Energy Astrophysical Ph...
Astrophysics of Galaxies

We report the discovery of two new millisecond pulsars (PSRs J0024$-$7204aa and J0024$-$7204ab) in the globular cluster 47\,Tucanae (NGC 104). Our results bring the total number of pulsars in 47\,Tucanae to 25. These pulsars were discovered by reprocessing archival observations from the Parkes radio telescope. We reprocessed the data using a standard search procedure based on the PRESTO software package as well as using a new method in which we incoherently added the power sp...

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Is NGC 6752 Hosting a Single or a Binary Black Hole?

February 26, 2003

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Monica Department of Physics, University of Milano Bicocca Colpi, Michela Department of Physics, University of Milano Bicocca Mapelli, Andrea Cagliari Astronomical Observatory Possenti
Astrophysics

The five millisecond pulsars that inhabit NGC 6752 display locations or accelerations remarkably different with respect to all other pulsars known in globular clusters. This may reflect the occurrence of an uncommon dynamics in the cluster core that could be attributed to the presence of a massive perturber. We here investigate whether a single intermediate-mass black hole, lying on the extrapolation of the mass versus sigma relation observed in galaxy spheroids, or, a less m...

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A Search for Millisecond Pulsars in Fermi LAT-Detected Globular Clusters

November 2, 2011

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Megan E. DeCesar, Scott M. Ransom, Paul S. Ray
High Energy Astrophysical Ph...

We have searched for millisecond pulsars (MSPs) in two globular clusters detected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope. These clusters contained no known MSPs prior to their detections in gamma rays. The discovery of gamma ray emission from many MSPs and the prevalence of MSPs in globular clusters points to a population of MSPs as the likely source of the detected GeV emission, directing our search for new cluster MSPs. We observed NGC 6652 and NGC 6388 at 2 GHz with the Green B...

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Three Pulsars Discovered by FAST in the Globular Cluster NGC 6517 with a Pulsar Candidate Sifting Code Based on Dispersion Measure to Signal-to-Noise Ratio Plots

March 27, 2021

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Zhichen Pan, Xiaoyun Ma, Lei Qian, Lin Wang, Zhen Yan, Jintao Luo, Scott M. Ransom, ... , Jiang Peng
High Energy Astrophysical Ph...

We report the discovery of three new pulsars in the Globular Cluster (GC) NGC6517, namely NGC 6517 E, F, and G, made with the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST). The spin periods of NGC 6517 E, F, and G are 7.60~ms, 24.89~ms, and 51.59~ms, respectively. Their dispersion measures are 183.29, 183.713, and 185.3~pc~cm$^{-3}$, respectively, all slightly larger than those of the previously known pulsars in this cluster. The spin period derivatives are at ...

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New Millisecond Pulsars in Globular Clusters

May 8, 2001

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N. D'Amico, A. Possenti, R. N. Manchester, J. Sarkissian, ... , Camilo F.
Astrophysics

A new search of globular clusters for millisecond pulsars is in progress at Parkes. In this paper we describe the motivation, the new hardware and software systems adopted, the survey plan and the preliminary results. So far, we have discovered ten new millisecond pulsars in four clusters for which no associated pulsars were previously known.

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