Survey of compact sources for pulsars and exotic objects -- I. Overview and initial discoveries

Abstract

Targeted searches for pulsars based on their counterparts in radio images have resulted in the discovery of interesting pulsars including the first ever discovered millisecond pulsar (MSP). Here, we report the first results from our image-based survey of compact sources for pulsars and exotic objects (SCOPE). SCOPE utilizes interferometric as well as time-domain observations to search for radio pulsations as well as characterize the sources in the image-domain to identify their true nature. In the first stage of the SCOPE survey, we have used the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) and the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) to follow up a sample of 31 compact and steep-spectrum sources. We provide an overview of the survey, the sample selection, the search procedures, and present discoveries of two MSPs -- PSR J1840+1102 and PSR J1827-0849. PSR J1840+1102 is a 1.6 ms pulsar at the edge of the Scutum-Centaurus arm, while PSR J1827-0849 is the radio counterpart of a gamma-ray pulsar that was earlier thought to be radio-quiet, and both the sources have very steep radio spectra. Using the interferometric data, we also provide a morphological classification of all the sources, model and characterize their spectra and identify the resolved, extragalactic sources in our sample. We discuss these results in the context of future image-based pulsar surveys.

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