Transient radio bursts from rotating neutron stars

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Nature

Scientific paper

10.1038/nature04440

The `radio sky' is relatively unexplored for transient signals, although the potential of radio-transient searches is high, as demonstrated recently by the discovery of a previously unknown type of source which varies on timescales of minutes to hours. Here we report a new large-scale search for radio sources varying on much shorter timescales. This has revealed 11 objects characterized by single, dispersed bursts having durations between 2 and 30 ms. The average time intervals between bursts range from 4 minutes to 3 hours, with radio emission typically detectable for < 1 s per day. From an analysis of the burst arrival times, we have identified periodicities in the range 0.4 - 7 s for ten of the 11 sources, suggesting a rotating neutron star origin. Despite the small number of sources presently detected, their ephemeral nature implies a total Galactic population which significantly exceeds that of the regularly pulsing radio pulsars. Five of the ten sources have periods greater than 4 s, and period derivatives have been measured for three of the sources, with one having a very high inferred magnetic field of 5e13 G, suggesting that this new population is related to other classes of isolated neutron stars observed at X-ray and gamma-ray wavelengths.

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