Researchers Discover a New Pulsar Possibly Associated with a Supernova Remnant
Recently, a master’s student ZHANG Zhen supervised by Professor YAN Wenming from the pulsar research group of Xinjiang Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, used the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) to search for pulsars in five supernova remnants and found a new pulsar potentially associated with one of the supernova remnants G29.6+0.1.
The relevant paper has been published in Chinese Physics Letters (CPL 2024, 41 (2): 029701) and selected as "Editors' Suggestion".
Searching for radio pulsars in supernova remnants is crucial for studying the formation of pulsars and the mechanisms of supernova explosions. In the standard evolutionary model, pulsars are neutron stars formed in the supernova explosion of intermediate-mass stars. At present, less than one-third of the 383 known supernova remnants have been confirmed to be associated with pulsars.
In this study, researchers analyzed the high-sensitivity observational data from FAST using the PRESTO software. They discovered a new pulsar, PSR J1845–0306, with a spin period of P = 983.6 ms and a dispersion measure of DM = 444.6 ± 2.0 cmˉ3 pc, in the direction of the supernova remnant G29.6+0.1. The distance to the pulsar was estimated using the YMW16 electron density model.
Search results for the pulsar PSR J1845-0306
Contact: ZHANG Zhen
Xinjiang Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences
E-mail: zhangzhen@xao.ac.cn
Article link: 10.1088/0256-307X/41/2/029701
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