ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The departure of all measured pulsar braking indexes from the canonical dipole value 3 has been attributed to several causes in the past. Careful monitoring of the Crab pulsar has revealed permanent changes in the spin-down rate which are most likely the accumulation of small jumps in the angle $alpha$ between the magnetic and spin axis. Recently, a large permanent change in the braking index of the in the Crab twin pulsar B0540-69 has been reported, and an analogous phenomenon seen in the high-field pulsar PSR 1846-0258 has been seen following a glitch, while another similar event (in PSR J119-6127) needs to be confirmed. We argue in this work that a common physical origin of all these observations can be attributed to the counter-alignment of the axis without serious violations of the observed features and with very modest inferred values of the hypothesized jump in the $alpha$ angle. In addition, detected increases of the X-ray luminosities after the events are an additional ingredient for this interpretation. We argue that a component of a time-dependent torque has been identified, being an important ingredient towards a full solution of observed pulsar timing behavior which is in search of a consistent modeling.
We study the putative emission of gravitational waves (GWs) in particular for pulsars with measured braking index. We show that the appropriate combination of both GW emission and magnetic dipole brakes can naturally explain the measured braking inde
Recently, Parthsarathy et al. analysed long-term timing observations of 85 young radio pulsars. They found that 11 objects have braking indices ranging $sim 10-100$, far from the classical value $n=3$. They also noted a mild correlation between measu
The observed braking index n_{obs} which had been determined for a few young pulsars, had been found to differ from the expected value for a rotating magnetic dipole model. Also, the observational jerk parameter, determined for two of these pulsars,
Pulsars are stars that emit electromagnetic radiation in well-defined time intervals. The frequency of such pulses decays with time as is quantified by the {it braking index} ($n$). In the canonical model $n = 3$ for all pulsars, but observational da
We present a phase-coherent timing solution for PSR J1640-4631, a young 206 ms pulsar using X-ray timing observations taken with NuSTAR. Over this timing campaign, we have measured the braking index of PSR J1640-4631 to be n = 3.15+/-0.03. Using a se