David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August 2006 1 Radio Timing for GLAST Pulsars Radio Timing for.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LIGO-G Z Beating the spin-down limit on gravitational wave emission from the Crab pulsar Michael Landry LIGO Hanford Observatory for the LIGO.
Advertisements

Team Presentation July 22, Jodrell Bank is the original arboretum for Manchester University. Immediately after World War II, first radio telescope.
Radio and Gamma-Ray Beams from Pulsars R. N. Manchester CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science Australia Telescope National Facility, Sydney Summary Pulse profiles.
Pulsar Wind Nebulae with LOFAR Jason Hessels (ASTRON/UvA) Astrophysics with E-LOFAR - Hamburg - Sept. 16 th -19 th, 2008.
The Fraction Geminga Alice K. Harding NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
EGRET unidentified sources and gamma-ray pulsars I. CGRO mission and the instrument EGRET and it’s scientific goals II. Simple introduction of EGRET sources.
Andrea Caliandro 1 Andrea Caliandro (INFN - Bari) on behalf the FERMI-LAT collaboration PSR J : the youngest gamma-ray pulsar in the Galaxy?
Pulsar Timing with the GBT Scott Ransom National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
Radio Telescopes Large metal dish acts as a mirror for radio waves. Radio receiver at prime focus. Surface accuracy not so important, so easy to make.
Multiwavelength Sky by NASA. Radio Continuum (408 MHz). Intensity of radio continuum emission from surveys with ground- based radio telescopes (Jodrell.
The Transient Radio Sky to be Revealed by the SKA Jim Cordes Cornell University AAS Meeting Washington, DC 8 January 2002.
Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission Su Yang Telescopes Examples Our work.
Blind search in EGRET data The bright pulsars Vele and Gminga can be found using a time difference window of only 3 hours. No scan in the frequency derivative.
Neutron Star Environment: from Supernova Remnants to Pulsar Wind Nebulae Stephen C.-Y. Ng McGill University Special thanks to Pat Slane for some materials.
Gamma-Ray Astronomy Dana Boltuch Ph. D
GLAST LAT Project – Collaboration MeetingAugust, 2005 Science Group Reports 1 GLAST Large Area Telescope: Collaboration Meeting August 26, 2005 Pulsar,
Surveying the Galactic Plane with VERITAS and GLAST Amanda Weinstein, UCLA Getting Involved with GLAST workshop May 22, 2007 UCLA.
A bright millisecond radio burst of Extragalactic origin Duncan Lorimer, Matthew Bailes, Maura McLaughlin, David Narkevic and Froney Crawford Science (in.
The Transient Universe: AY 250 Spring 2007 Existing Transient Surveys: Radio I: Pulsars Geoff Bower.
Navigation using pulsars ASTRONOMY AND SPACE SCIENCE George Hobbs Nov 2014.
Panorama of the Universe: Daily all-sky surveys with the SKA John D. Bunton, CSIRO TIP, Ronald D. Ekers, CSIRO ATNF and Elaine M. Sadler, University of.
Dakota Johnson, Tildon Johnson, Kyle Barker Rowan County Senior High School Mentor: Mrs. Jennifer Carter Abstract Data Analysis Acknowledgements Radio.
25 Facts about Parkes, Pulsars and
Pulsar issues Pulsar working group, 13 juin 2006 David Smith 1 Miscellaneous timing musings David Smith et al CENBG/In2p3/CNRS Bordeaux, France.
Les Pulsars gamma avec GLAST David Smith Centre d’Etudes Nucléaires de Bordeaux-Gradignan ( CENBG - in2p3 - CNRS ) Moriond 4 February 2009 GeV Galactic.
1 Arecibo Synergy with GLAST (and other gamma-ray telescopes) Frontiers of Astronomy with the World’s Largest Radio Telescope 12 September 2007 Dave Thompson.
Compare refracting and reflecting telescopes. Have you ever bent or slowed down light? How?
ATLASGAL ATLASGAL APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy F. Schuller, K. Menten, P. Schilke, et al. Max Planck Institut für Radioastronomie.
Abstract The Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) will be launched less than a year from now, and its Large Area Telescope (LAT) is expected to.
David Smith CENBG Report from Prague meeting with Radio Pulsar People PSR Stockholm, 28 August GLAST Pulsar Radio Timing Discussions Report.
Jamie Holder VERITAS Collaboration Bartol Research Institute/ University of Delaware LS I +61° 303: The High Energy View "Getting Involved with GLAST"
Radio Observations of X-ray Binaries : Solitary and Binary Millisecond Pulsars Jeong-Sook Kim 1 & Soon-Wook Kim 2  Department of Space Science and Astronomy.
Finding Fast Pulsars Today andTomorrow Pulsar Timing Array - A Nanohertz Gravitational Wave Telescope July 21-23, 2005 Jason Hessels McGill University.
Pulsar timing with Nançay, and DC2, cont’d Pulsar working group, 2 May 2006 David Smith 1 Update on Pulsar timing for GLAST with the Nançay Radio telescope.
Pulsar searches with known ephemeredes DC2 Closeout, 1 June 2006 David Smith for the Bordeaux 4 1 DC2 Pulsar studies using known ephemeredes David Smith.
Gamma Ray Pulsar Candidates for GLAST D.A. Smith, D. Dumora, L. Guillemot, D. Parent, T. Reposeur Centre d’études nucléaires de Bordeaux-Gradignan J. Eric.
Vela L&EO Checks Service Challenge Kickoff, 30 November, 2006 Damien P. & Lucas G. for Bordeaux 1 Instrument verifications using early Vela data Towards.
Pulsar surveys at Arecibo and Green Bank David Champion Gravity Wave Meeting, Marsfield, Dec 2007.
RadioAstron space VLBI mission: early results. XXVIII GA IAU, Beijing, August RadioAstron space VLBI mission: early results. XXVIII GA IAU, Beijing,
Team Lyne Conclusive Presentation Pulsar Search Collaboratory Heather Frank, Tyler Farrell, Annie B. Agee, Emily Dick, Trent McDaniel Caitlin Ahrens &
Search for Young, Gamma-quiet Pulsars D. Dumora 1, D. Eismann 1, D.A. Smith 1, D. Parent 2, L. Guillemot 3 1 Centre d'Etudes Nucleaires de Bordeaux-Gradignan.
Pulsars: The radio/gamma-ray Connection Prospects for pulsar studies with AGILE and GLAST Synergy with radio telescopes –Timing and follow-up –Radio vs.
Name EPOCH (Hz) (10 –12 s –2 ) Data Range (MJD) J (4)– (1)55666 – (7)– (5)55912.
Associations of H.E.S.S. VHE  -ray sources with Pulsar Wind Nebulae Yves Gallant (LPTA, U. Montpellier II, France) for the H.E.S.S. Collaboration “The.
AAS, LB 01/06 Press Conf -1 A Plethora of Pulsars Roger W. Romani Stanford University Alice K. Harding GSFC for the Fermi LAT collaboration.
Team Bell Anna, Kris, Cassie, Chandler, Ellen, Firas, Tessa, and Josh An investigation into Pulsar Data collected by the Green Bank Telescope.
Why look at different frequencies of light? Cooler objects are only visible at long wavelengths: radio, microwaves, IR. Hotter objects are only visible.
44 th Rencontres de Moriond 1 Blind Period Search gamma-ray pulsar by Fermi-LAT F. Giordano Dipartimento Interateneo di Fisica and INFN Sez. Bari for the.
Status of pulsar simulation for DC 2 Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope Massimiliano Razzano Nicola Omodei GLAST DC2 Software Workshop (Goddard Space.
Proposal for a Global Network for Beam Instrumentation [BIGNET] BI Group Meeting – 08/06/2012 J-J Gras CERN-BE-BI.
Peter F. Michelson Stanford University Principal Investigator, Large Area Telescope Collaboration on behalf of the Fermi LAT Collaboration.
APS meeting, Dallas 22/04/06 1 A search for gravitational wave signals from known pulsars using early data from the LIGO S5 run Matthew Pitkin on behalf.
GLAST LAT Project DC2 Software Workshop, GSFC, June 27-29, Analytical Objectives for Science Tools for DC2 for DC2 S. W. Digel Stanford Linear Accelerator.
LIGO-G Z Peter Shawhan (University of Maryland) for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration Special thanks to Michael Landry and Bruce Allen Eastern.
Damien Parent – Moriond, February PSR J , PSR J , and their cousins -- young & noisy gamma ray pulsars Damien Parent on behalf of.
W.Becker 1, M.C.Weisskopf 2, Z.Arzoumanian 3, D.Lorimer 4, F.Camilo 5, R.F.Elsner 2, G.Kanbach 1, O.Reimer 6, D.A.Swartz 2, A.F.Tennant 2, S.L.O’Dell 2.
First result with PAF on a big single-dish radio telescope X. Deng, A. Chippendale, S. Johnston, G. Hobbs, D. George, R. Karuppusamy ASTRONOMY AND SPACE.
GWDAW11, Potsdam 19/12/06 LIGO-G Z 1 New gravitational wave upper limits for selected millisecond pulsars using LIGO S5 data Matthew Pitkin for.
Module 3 – Nautical Science
Part-time pulsarS on behalf of PALFA Collaboration
Periodicity Search in X-ray data of RX J
Long-Term Timing of Globular Cluster Pulsars
Pulsar Blind search in the DC2 data
Early Fermi LAT observations of the Vela pulsar
Observation of Pulsars and Plerions with MAGIC
DC2 pulsars analysis: a population point-of-view
Matthew Pitkin on behalf of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration
sourceIdentify and identification strategies for LAT sources
Robert Johnson W. Atwood, M. Ziegler, B. Baughman U.C. Santa Cruz and
The Hunt for Pulsars Rowan County Pulsar Astronomers Abstract
Presentation transcript:

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Radio Timing for GLAST Pulsars Radio Timing for GLAST Pulsars GLAST LAT collaboration meeting Stockholm, August 2006 David Smith for the PSR SNR PWNe group CENBG/In2p3/CNRS Bordeaux, France Parkes (Australia) Nançay (France) Jodrell (England)

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Pulsar, Supernova Remnant, Plerion Science Group Report D.J. Thompson & R.W. Romani, co-leadersAgenda Report on radio timing planning (David Smith) - 20 min.Report on radio timing planning (David Smith) - 20 min. Report on X-ray timing planning (Joe Dolan) - 10 minReport on X-ray timing planning (Joe Dolan) - 10 min Report on DC2 results (Alice Harding) - 20 min.Report on DC2 results (Alice Harding) - 20 min. Discussion of DC3 needs (Francesco Longo) - 10 min.Discussion of DC3 needs (Francesco Longo) - 10 min. Discussion of papers, especially LAT paper (Roger Romani) - 20 min.Discussion of papers, especially LAT paper (Roger Romani) - 20 min.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Topics "Good ephemeredes will dramatically enhance pulsar (and PWN) science" -- Roger Romani, in "Radio Timing for GLAST: Requirements, Costs, and Triage'', 21 Feb Why we need a lot of radio pulsar timing 2.Which radio telescopes are expected to make which measurements 3.Distillation: protocol for radio ephemeredes to reach D4.fits file(s) on the LAT servers. Most hyperlinks in this talk can be found at "radio confluence", i.e.radio confluence and in any case they’re active links in the powerpoint.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Galaxy of pulsars animation by Michael Kramer (Manchester/Jodrell)

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Why we need radio timing of pulsars 1.10x better pulsed sensitivity than without accurately known period DC2 seems to confirm N  _true = N  _observed/Ntrials, and Ntrials large for blind search. Timing noise makes blind search harder for multi-month data 2.Signatures of beam geometry and acceleration region & mechanism are in the variations of light curves with wavelength. 3.Most gamma ray pulsar candidates are young & noisy. That means, the rotation parameters (ephemeredes) "spoil" within weeks to months, so the radio measurements need to be repeated perdiodically throughout the mission. 4.GLAST won't point first year – will see all pulsars "all" the time. Slow accumulation of gammas over time requires long term accurate timing.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Ephemeredes sooner, not later Realize later that PSR Jxxxx+yy might have been a good one? TOO LATE, you can’t go back, see e.g in astro-ph/ (Thompson Digel Nolan Reimer) Fun fact : 600+ radio pulsars in Joe Fierro's "EGRET pulsars" thesis; plus when I started with ATNF late last year ; early this year ; during the Spring ; Presently 1775….

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August CGRO had the same issue "Worse" for GLAST LAT: 3x more known pulsars, 25x more sensitivity.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Which are GLAST's candidates? Study of the huge* sample of known gamma pulsars leads to the conclusion that  Edot/d² is a good predictor of gamma ray emission, where Edot=dE/dt is the the rotation spin-down energy. Distance "d" often poorly known ( derived from DM=Dispersion Measure and model of electron density in interstellar space ), so hedge bets by also keeping large Edots. * That's a joke, son.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Gamma ray pulsars From G. Kanbach, 363rd Heraeus seminar, May 2006 – other authors order these differently…

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Gamma ray pulsar candidates We made a list of 255 candidates, applying some convienient cuts to the ATNF database. All known "favorites" are ( hopefully !) included. CUT N' PASTE OF THE ATNF WWW EXPERT MENU: User-defined variables C1 (sqrt(Edot)/Dist1/Dist1)/5.362E18 ( normalize to ~Crab) Sort on field C1 Order Descending Condition (Edot>1E34 || (sqrt(Edot)/Dist1/Dist1)/5.362E18 > 0.01) (~1% of Crab)

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August GLAST’s gamma candidates, compared to all known pulsars and the CGRO 7, prepared by J. Petit & C. Loumena

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August TOA’s for "bread & butter" pulsars “Bread & butter” pulsars – a couple of hundred gamma candidates that are relatively easy to measure in radio. Roger defines Treq and VperY in his "TimingTriage.pdf": Treq: 100 meter class time (hours) required for needed Time-of-arrival (TOA) precision; VperY: Visits per Year to not loose count of neutron star rotations (depends mainly on Pdot) "Easy" means (Treq < 1 hour) for a 100 meter class telescope and (VperY < 3) For Treq<0.1 h, small telescopes can do. We will load into D4.fits any valid ephemeredes we can get our hands on, and search for gamma pulsations at those positions (even if no DC excess, apologies to Jean Ballet et al – remember PSR B in EGRET!).

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August The Big Three pulsar telescopes The Big Three pulsar telescopes for long term timing of hundreds of "bread & butter" gamma ray candidates Parkes (Australia) Nançay (France) Jodrell (England)

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August TOA’s for "important but tough" pulsars “key but tough” pulsars – a dozen or two pulsars with the biggest spin-down energies (best gamma ray candidates) but faint radio signals (low S1400, high duty cycle, high b'grd makes high Treq) and large VperY. [ For radio flux density at 1400 MHz S1400 < 25 µJy, use X-ray satellites when possible, see Joe Dolan's presentation. ]

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Green Bank (West Virginia) Oversubscribed – not for bread & butter, only caviar & champagne. Save for e.g. deep searches of new geminga-likes. Arecibo (Puerto Rico) The Big Guns

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Building a strawman proposal Take list of 255 gamma pulsar candidates, see confluence radio timing page and next slide.confluence radio timing page  Calculate Roger’s Treq and VperY (my code is in strawman.tar at radio confluence)radio confluence  Jodrell (Nançay) works down to declination –35° (-39°), Parkes good as far north as  =+2°.  63 "Northern", 129 "Parkes", 62 "Either". Therefore, "eithers" better shared by Jodrell & Parkes, that is, 63+62=125 with  -30° for those two.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Parkes strawman proposal Parkes strawman proposal (first 32 of 129, sorted by Treq) similar for the Northern telescopes… ( a lot of ) bread n' butter Ouch!

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Sharing the load Effelsberg (Germany) Nanshan (China) Some other instruments can time our radio-brighter ( small Treq ) but noisier ( large VperY ) pulsars. Relieve pressure on the Big Three Provide redundant measurements, fill in coverage gaps Special projects, e.g. tracking DM at frequencies besides 1400 MHz, searches for giant pulse correlations, etc. Remember – we need timing for years, but resources at each instrument ebb & flow. Many (most!) eager to work with GLAST. ATA (Hat Creek, California)

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August GLAST Pulsar Radio Timing Discussions Report on GLAST Pulsar Radio Timing Discussions at the Prague IAU GA David Smith w. D. Dumora CENBG/In2p3/CNRS Bordeaux, France August 2006

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August GLAST radio timing "splinter session" at Prague Roger & Dave T on the JD02 organizing Committee, volunteered me to give “Future Gamma & TeV Observatories for Pulsars” (thank you!) (see talk at radio confluence.)radio confluence Many attendees are members of Glast Pulsar Advisory Group (see slide 18 of by Steve Thorsett) So organized a Splinter Session (see PragueDiscussion and PragueDiscussionBis at radio confluence.)radio confluence Well attended, about 20 people, a veritable Who’s Who of radio pulsarers. AGENDA: a) alert them to our ~250 favorite candidates, in hope of defining who- does-which ; b) alert them to D4.fits, to start process of translating their formats and conventions into ours. They’ve been waiting for our call. Eager and very well informed.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August So? What's the plan? Bread & butter:  Northern hemisphere, no real issue – most already being timed. Coordinate to make sure that all are, in a coherent way. The radio astronomers are in touch with each other.  Southern hemisphere – Parkes is the only big pulsar instrument. Not automated, requires shifters. Proposal has to be made & defended (Simon Johnston), and they request help for a person-year (e.g. student or technician). Important but tough  A few being timed anyway.  A few to be offloaded to X-ray instruments.  The others to be subjects of specific proposals Current key task – clarify exactly who does which how, then support PI's in writing and defending their proposals. Steve Thorsett and/or Roger Romani will be coordinating via personal contacts.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Filling D4.fits* For gtpphase etc to work like in DC2, need  TOAs to become proper timing solutions ("ephemeredes")  Ephemeredes must get loaded into a D4.fits on the GSSC servers. D. Dumora wrote code² that takes TEMPO output from Nançay, Jodrell, etc and converts it to the.txt format prescribed for gtpulsardb. We appended 13 Nançay & Jodrell pulsars to the ~1100 CGRO ephemeredes in the D4.fits sample provided by Masa H & James P at GSSC 3. The whole chain works, tuning in progress. *Don't know what "D4.fits" means? Go to pulsar section of the SAS workbook and look for ephemeredes database, or look at e.g. Max Razzano's DC2 tutorials. ² 3

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Filling D4.fits more on Filling D4.fits After this rustic beta-testing, will industrialize. Format conversion routines will become daemons at GSSC servers. Radio-astronomers will send their numbers to get loaded into D4.fits that will wind up on the GSSC servers*. Need tools to test validity of final numbers (quality control). * Tom Stephens already has these structures in place.

David Smith CENBG Plans for Radio Pulsar Timing GLAST collaboration meeting, Stockholm, 30 August Conclusion: Pulsar Timing Action Items 1.Refine lists of who does which, propose to the radiotelescopes, and iterate. 2.Identify PI’s for time requests at GBT, RXTE, etc. Support proposal preparation. 3.Continue to load D4.fits with real ephemeredes, and excercise Science Tools. Develop QA tools. 4.Help provide manpower or $$$ to radio observatories.