4.7 Article

Mode changing in J1909-3744: the most precisely timed pulsar

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 510, Issue 4, Pages 5908-5915

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab3549

Keywords

methods: data analysis; stars: neutron; pulsars: general; pulsars: individual: J1909-3744

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [CE17010004]
  2. ARC Future Fellowship [FT190100155]
  3. Australian Square Kilometer Array (SKA) Office
  4. Swinburne University of Technology
  5. MeerTime
  6. National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)

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This study presents baseband radio observations of the millisecond pulsar J1909-3744 using the MeerKAT telescope, revealing strong evidence of pulse mode changing and an improvement in timing precision. The impact of this improvement on gravitational wave background searches is discussed.
We present baseband radio observations of the millisecond pulsar J1909 - 3744, the most precisely timed pulsar, using the MeerKAT telescope as part of the MeerTime pulsar timing array campaign. During a particularly bright scintillation event the pulsar showed strong evidence of pulse mode changing, among the first millisecond pulsars and the shortest duty cycle millisecond pulsar to do so. Two modes appear to be present, with the weak (lower signal-to-noise ratio) mode arriving 9.26 +/- 3.94 mu s earlier than the strong counterpart. Further, we present a new value of the jitter noise for this pulsar of 8.20 +/- 0.14 ns in one hour, finding it to be consistent with previous measurements taken with the MeerKAT (9 +/- 3 ns) and Parkes (8.6 +/- 0.8 ns) telescopes, but inconsistent with the previously most precise measurement taken with the Green Bank telescope (14 +/- 0.5 ns). Timing analysis on the individual modes is carried out for this pulsar, and we find an approximate 10 per cent improvement in the timing precision is achievable through timing the strong mode only as opposed to the full sample of pulses. By forming a model of the average pulse from templates of the two modes, we time them simultaneously and demonstrate that this timing improvement can also be achieved in regular timing observations. We discuss the impact an improvement of this degree on this pulsar would have on searches for the stochastic gravitational wave background, as well as the impact of a similar improvement on all MeerTime PTA pulsars.

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