Polarized radio emission of RRAT J1854+0306
Qi Guo, Minzhi Kong, P. F. Wang, Y. Yan, D. J. Zhou
arXiv:2404.09418v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Polarized radio emission of RRAT J1854+0306 is investigated with single pulses using FAST. Its emission is characterized by nulls, narrow and weak pulses and occasional wide and intense bursts with a nulling fraction of 53.2%. Its burst emission is typically of one rotation, and occasionally of two or three or even 5 rotations at the most, but without significant periodicity. The integrated pulse profile has a `S’ shaped position angle curve that is superposed with orthogonal modes, from which geometry parameters are obtained. Individual pulses exhibit diverse profile morphology with single, double or multiple peaks. The intensity and width of these pulses are highly correlated, and bright pulses generally have wide profiles with multiple peaks. These nulling behaviours, profile morphology and polarization demonstrate that RRAT has the same physical origins as the normal pulsars.arXiv:2404.09418v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Polarized radio emission of RRAT J1854+0306 is investigated with single pulses using FAST. Its emission is characterized by nulls, narrow and weak pulses and occasional wide and intense bursts with a nulling fraction of 53.2%. Its burst emission is typically of one rotation, and occasionally of two or three or even 5 rotations at the most, but without significant periodicity. The integrated pulse profile has a `S’ shaped position angle curve that is superposed with orthogonal modes, from which geometry parameters are obtained. Individual pulses exhibit diverse profile morphology with single, double or multiple peaks. The intensity and width of these pulses are highly correlated, and bright pulses generally have wide profiles with multiple peaks. These nulling behaviours, profile morphology and polarization demonstrate that RRAT has the same physical origins as the normal pulsars.

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