Title: Looking at What We Cant See: Pulsar Radio Observations
1Looking at What We Cant SeePulsar Radio
Observations
- ST 562 Radio Astronomy For Teachers
- By Cecilia Huang and Joleen Welborn
2The Tools
- SRT Single Radio Telescope
- One telescope detects and records radio waves at
different - frequencies. We took observations at
- 1420.4 MHz, the emission frequency of neutral
- hydrogen.
- N2I2 Interferometer
- Two 3.05 m diameter radio telescopes situated
- 24 m apart will detect at different frequencies
- as well, but can also be used to calculate RA
- and Declination. Operates in 3 possible modes
- tracking, meridian and non-meridian (drift), and
as a single - dish. Together, the telescopes act as if they
were a single - telescope with higher resolution.
http//www.cassicorp.com
http//www.nrao.edu/epo/amateur/N2I2.pdf
3N2I2 Drift Scan of Sun
- We took a reading using the N2I2 interferometer
in drift mode. We lined the telescope up and let
the object drift into the beam. The fringes of
the sun are predictably regular and calculations
of the fringe period match the theoretical. We
did this to make sure the equipment is
functioning well.
4Calculating Fringe Period
3 fringes over 100 seconds
Divide number of fringes over that period of
time. This gives the fringe period, or the number
of fringes per second. The number we get can be
plugged into the following equation determine
what the RA and DEC is. t ? / by ?ecos d If
this matches the actual position of the sun, we
can conclude the equipment is working properly.
5Choosing the Project
- Because of the fascinating nature of pulsars, we
thought it would be interesting to observe one
with one of these radio telescopes. - We chose the pulsar in the Crab Nebula, PSR
053121
6What is a Pulsar?
- Discovered in the 1960s by Dr. Jocelyn Bell who,
as a grad-student, was searching radio strip
charts for something new. - Neutron star
- Very, very dense
- Spins really fast
- Emits high energy particles like x-rays
- Magnetic fields are intense
- Pulses over regular periods of time with
electromagnetic radiation.
7Diagram of a Pulsar
Image from http//glast.gsfc.nasa.gov/public/scien
ce/pulsars.html
8X-Ray Image of the Pulsar in the Crab Nebula
Image from http//glast.gsfc.nasa.gov/public/scien
ce/pulsars.html
9What We Expected
- At the beginning of the course, we werent quite
sure what to - expect, so we performed the shotgun approach
when - choosing our observations, hoping to find
something that - would tell us a bit about pulsars.
- We expected that
- Drift Scans of known pulsars with SRT would show
obvious spikes at predictable or regular times. - N2I2 would show fringes with which we could run
calculations that would determine RA and Dec or
compare with theoretical fringe periods.
10Drift Scan of Crab Nebula using N2I2
11Second Reading, 30 minutes later
12Calculations
- We determined the fringe period of both graphs by
dividing the average number of fringes by the
period of time that went by. - We found that not only were the graphs very
different, so were the fringe periods. - Crab Scan I 23.33 seconds per fringe
- Crab Scan II 15.22 seconds per fringe
13Calculating the Theoretical Fringe Period
- t ? / by ?ecos d
- t is the fringe period in seconds
- ? is the wavelength of the observation, in this
case, 20 cm or 0.2 m - by is the baseline distance between telescopes,
24 m - ?e is the equatorial rotation of Earth which is
about 7.29 x 10-5 radians per second - cos d is the cosine function of the declination
angle - Using this calculation, the theoretical fringe
period should be near - 124.2 seconds per fringe. Unfortunately, neither
of our observations - came anywhere near the theoretical.
14Speculated Possibilities for This Outcome
- The N2I2 has fairly accurately detected this
pulsar before. Perhaps the N2I2 has lost some of
its sensitivity since the hail storm. - Observation point too close to the sun and we got
a lobe. - Pulsars are just REALLY difficult to detect using
interferometry.
15What does the SRT tell us?
- Our next observation was with the
- SRT. We wanted to see if there were
- going to be any regularly spaced
- pulses from the Crab Nebula on the
- graph.
16SRT Scan of PSR 0531-21
17Pulse Frequency
- To get the pulse frequency, we counted the peaks
and divided the number over the amount of time
passed. We tried to be as discriminating as
possible,but it was rather difficult. - of peaks between 58 and 65.
- Time of observation 19 minutes, or 1140
seconds. - 58/1140, 65/1140 0.051, 0.057 seconds between
pulses, or 19.7,17.53 pulses per second. - Compare to the actual period pulse of the Crab
Nebula which is 0.033 seconds or about 29 times
per second.
18YAY!!!
- Thats pretty darn close!
- However We may have a better number if we took
a longer reading and there was no lag in the data
stream between the AOC and the VLA. PLUS, there
may be a sensitivity issue.
19Future Observations
- I dont think we should abandon the pulsar
observation with N2I2. I believe we can get
close to the theoretical fringe period by taking
several more observations and averaging them out
somehow. - Observe during a time when the suns declination
is not so close to the pulsar. - Look at other known pulsars, such as PSR 032954
20References
- Danielles interferometer design paper
http//www.nrao.edu/epo/amateur/N2I2.pdf - Instructions on how to use the SRT
http//www.astro.cf.ac.uk/observatory/radioman.htm
l - Pulsar explanations, diagrams, and images
http//glast.gsfc.nasa.gov/public/science/pulsars.
html - Coordinate System of RA and Dec
http//www.go-astronomy.com/a
rticles/coordinate-system.htm - Amateur Radio Astronomy Projects
http//www.radiosky.com/rspplsr.html - Messier Object Help http//longmontastro.org/albe
rs/las/messier/mess_02_05.pdf - Lyne, A.G. and Graham-Smith, F., Pulsar
Astronomy Cambridge Astrophysics Series, 1990
(ISBN0-521-32681-8)