Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
91 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Premium
50 tokens/sec
GPT-5 Medium
27 tokens/sec
GPT-5 High Premium
19 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
103 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Premium
82 tokens/sec
GPT OSS 120B via Groq Premium
458 tokens/sec
Kimi K2 via Groq Premium
209 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

A Measurement Model for Precision Pulsar Timing (1010.3785v1)

Published 19 Oct 2010 in astro-ph.IM and astro-ph.GA

Abstract: This paper describes a comprehensive measurement model for the error budget of pulse arrival times with emphasis on intrinsic pulse jitterand plasma propagation effects (particularly interstellar scattering), which are stochastic in time and have diverse dependences on radio frequency. To reduce their contribution, timing measurements can be made over a range of frequencies that depends on a variety of pulsar and instrumentation-dependent factors that we identify. A salient trend for high signal-to-noise measurements of millisecond pulsars is that time-of-arrival precision is limited either by irreducible interstellar scattering or by pulse-phase jitter caused by variable emission within pulsar magnetospheres. A cap on timing errors implies that pulsars must be confined to low dispersion measures (DMs) and observed at high frequencies. Use of wider bandwidths that increase signal-to-noise ratios will degrade timing precision if nondispersive chromatic effects are not mitigated. The allowable region in the DM-frequency plane depends on how chromatic timing perturbations are addressed. Without mitigation, observations at 1.4~GHz or 5~GHz are restricted to $\DM\lesssim 30$ and $\lesssim 100~\DMu$, respectively. With aggressive mitigation of interstellar scattering and use of large telescopes to provide adequate sensitivity at high frequencies (e.g. Arecibo, FAST, phase 1 of the SKA, and the SKA), pulsars with DMs up to 500~$\DMu$ can be used in precision timing applications. We analyze methods that fit arrival times vs. frequency at a given epoch prior to multi-epoch fitting. While the terms of greatest astrophysical interest are achromatic (e.g. orbital and gravitational wave perturbations), measurements may ultimately be limited by similarly achromatic stochasticity in a pulsar's spin rate.

Citations (66)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

Dice Question Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Follow-up Questions

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.