PERSONAL DE APOYO
GANCIO GONZALEZ Guillermo Matias
artículos
Título:
Upgraded antennas for pulsar observations in the Argentine Institute of Radio astronomy
Autor/es:
GUILLERMO GANCIO; CARLOS LOUSTO; LUCIANO COMBI; SANTIAGO DEL PALACIO; FEDERICO LÓPEZ ARMENGOL; JORGE COMBI; FEDERICO GARCIA; PAULA KORNECKI; ANA LAURA MULLER; EDUARDO GUTIERREZ; FERNANDO HAUSCARRIAGA; G. C. MANCUSO
Revista:
ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS
Editorial:
EDP SCIENCES S A
Referencias:
Lugar: Paris; Año: 2020 vol. 633 p. 1 - 12
ISSN:
0004-6361
Resumen:
Context.The Argentine Institute of Radio astronomy (IAR) is equipped with two single-dish 30 m radio antennas capable of perform-ing daily observations of pulsars and radio transients in the southern hemisphere at 1.4 GHz.Aims.We aim to introduce to the international community the upgrades performed and to show that the IAR observatory has becomesuitable for investigations in numerous areas of pulsar radio astronomy, such as pulsar timing arrays, targeted searches of continuousgravitational waves sources, monitoring of magnetars and glitching pulsars, and studies of a short time scale interstellar scintillation.Methods.We refurbished the two antennas at IAR to achieve high-quality timing observations. We gathered more than 1000 h ofobservations with both antennas in order to study the timing precision and sensitivity they can achieve.Results.We introduce the new developments for both radio telescopes at IAR. We present daily observations of the millisecond pulsarJ0437−4715 with timing precision better than 1μs. We also present a follow-up of the reactivation of the magnetar XTE J1810?197and the measurement and monitoring of the latest (Feb. 1, 2019) glitch of the Vela pulsar (J0835?4510).Conclusions.We show that IAR is capable of performing pulsar monitoring in the 1.4 GHz radio band for long periods of time witha daily cadence. This opens up the possibility of pursuing several goals in pulsar science, including coordinated multi-wavelengthobservations with other observatories. In particular, daily observations of the millisecond pulsar J0437−4715 would increase the sen-sitivity of pulsar timing arrays. We also show IAR?s great potential for studying targets of opportunity and transient phenomena, suchas magnetars, glitches, and fast-radio-burst sources.