The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

The Third Fermi Large Area Telescope Catalog of Gamma-Ray Pulsars

  • D. A. Smith,
  • S. Abdollahi,
  • M. Ajello,
  • M. Bailes,
  • L. Baldini,
  • J. Ballet,
  • M. G. Baring,
  • C. Bassa,
  • J. Becerra Gonzalez,
  • R. Bellazzini,
  • A. Berretta,
  • B. Bhattacharyya,
  • E. Bissaldi,
  • R. Bonino,
  • E. Bottacini,
  • J. Bregeon,
  • P. Bruel,
  • M. Burgay,
  • T. H. Burnett,
  • R. A. Cameron,
  • F. Camilo,
  • R. Caputo,
  • P. A. Caraveo,
  • E. Cavazzuti,
  • G. Chiaro,
  • S. Ciprini,
  • C. J. Clark,
  • I. Cognard,
  • A. Corongiu,
  • P. Cristarella Orestano,
  • M. Crnogorcevic,
  • A. Cuoco,
  • S. Cutini,
  • F. D’Ammando,
  • A. de Angelis,
  • M. E. DeCesar,
  • S. De Gaetano,
  • R. de Menezes,
  • J. Deneva,
  • F. de Palma,
  • N. Di Lalla,
  • F. Dirirsa,
  • L. Di Venere,
  • A. Domínguez,
  • D. Dumora,
  • S. J. Fegan,
  • E. C. Ferrara,
  • A. Fiori,
  • H. Fleischhack,
  • C. Flynn,
  • A. Franckowiak,
  • P. C. C. Freire,
  • Y. Fukazawa,
  • P. Fusco,
  • G. Galanti,
  • V. Gammaldi,
  • F. Gargano,
  • D. Gasparrini,
  • F. Giacchino,
  • N. Giglietto,
  • F. Giordano,
  • M. Giroletti,
  • D. Green,
  • I. A. Grenier,
  • L. Guillemot,
  • S. Guiriec,
  • M. Gustafsson,
  • A. K. Harding,
  • E. Hays,
  • J. W. Hewitt,
  • D. Horan,
  • X. Hou,
  • F. Jankowski,
  • R. P. Johnson,
  • T. J. Johnson,
  • S. Johnston,
  • J. Kataoka,
  • M. J. Keith,
  • M. Kerr,
  • M. Kramer,
  • M. Kuss,
  • L. Latronico,
  • S.-H. Lee,
  • D. Li,
  • J. Li,
  • B. Limyansky,
  • F. Longo,
  • F. Loparco,
  • L. Lorusso,
  • M. N. Lovellette,
  • M. Lower,
  • P. Lubrano,
  • A. G. Lyne,
  • Y. Maan,
  • S. Maldera,
  • R. N. Manchester,
  • A. Manfreda,
  • M. Marelli,
  • G. Martí-Devesa,
  • M. N. Mazziotta,
  • J. E. McEnery,
  • I. Mereu,
  • P. F. Michelson,
  • M. Mickaliger,
  • W. Mitthumsiri,
  • T. Mizuno,
  • A. A. Moiseev,
  • M. E. Monzani,
  • A. Morselli,
  • M. Negro,
  • R. Nemmen,
  • L. Nieder,
  • E. Nuss,
  • N. Omodei,
  • M. Orienti,
  • E. Orlando,
  • J. F. Ormes,
  • M. Palatiello,
  • D. Paneque,
  • G. Panzarini,
  • A. Parthasarathy,
  • M. Persic,
  • M. Pesce-Rollins,
  • R. Pillera,
  • H. Poon,
  • T. A. Porter,
  • A. Possenti,
  • G. Principe,
  • S. Rainò,
  • R. Rando,
  • S. M. Ransom,
  • P. S. Ray,
  • M. Razzano,
  • S. Razzaque,
  • A. Reimer,
  • O. Reimer,
  • N. Renault-Tinacci,
  • R. W. Romani,
  • M. Sánchez-Conde,
  • P. M. Saz Parkinson,
  • L. Scotton,
  • D. Serini,
  • C. Sgrò,
  • R. Shannon,
  • V. Sharma,
  • Z. Shen,
  • E. J. Siskind,
  • G. Spandre,
  • P. Spinelli,
  • B. W. Stappers,
  • T. E. Stephens,
  • D. J. Suson,
  • S. Tabassum,
  • H. Tajima,
  • D. Tak,
  • G. Theureau,
  • D. J. Thompson,
  • O. Tibolla,
  • D. F. Torres,
  • J. Valverde,
  • C. Venter,
  • Z. Wadiasingh,
  • N. Wang,
  • N. Wang,
  • P. Wang,
  • P. Weltevrede,
  • K. Wood,
  • J. Yan,
  • G. Zaharijas,
  • C. Zhang,
  • W. Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acee67
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 958, no. 2
p. 191

Abstract

Read online

We present 294 pulsars found in GeV data from the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. Another 33 millisecond pulsars (MSPs) discovered in deep radio searches of LAT sources will likely reveal pulsations once phase-connected rotation ephemerides are achieved. A further dozen optical and/or X-ray binary systems colocated with LAT sources also likely harbor gamma-ray MSPs. This catalog thus reports roughly 340 gamma-ray pulsars and candidates, 10% of all known pulsars, compared to ≤11 known before Fermi. Half of the gamma-ray pulsars are young. Of these, the half that are undetected in radio have a broader Galactic latitude distribution than the young radio-loud pulsars. The others are MSPs, with six undetected in radio. Overall, ≥236 are bright enough above 50 MeV to fit the pulse profile, the energy spectrum, or both. For the common two-peaked profiles, the gamma-ray peak closest to the magnetic pole crossing generally has a softer spectrum. The spectral energy distributions tend to narrow as the spindown power $\dot{E}$ decreases to its observed minimum near 10 ^33 erg s ^−1 , approaching the shape for synchrotron radiation from monoenergetic electrons. We calculate gamma-ray luminosities when distances are available. Our all-sky gamma-ray sensitivity map is useful for population syntheses. The electronic catalog version provides gamma-ray pulsar ephemerides, properties, and fit results to guide and be compared with modeling results.

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