High time resolution astrophysics and pulsars

Andrew Shearer

Research output: Chapter in Book or Conference Publication/ProceedingConference Publicationpeer-review

Abstract

The discovery of pulsars in 1968 heralded an era where the temporal characteristics of optical detectors had to be reassessed. Up to this point detector integration times would normally be measured in minutes rather seconds and definitely not on sub-second time scales. At the start of the 21st century pulsar observations are still pushing the limits of detector telescope capabilities. Flux variations on times scales less than 1 nsec have been observed during giant radio pulses. Pulsar studies over the next 10-20 years will require instruments with time resolutions below a microsecond, high-quantum quantum efficiency, reasonable energy resolution and sensitive to circular possible and linear polarisation of stochastic signals. This chapter is a review of temporally resolved optical observations of pulsars. It concludes with estimates of the observability of pulsars with both existing telescopes and into the ELT era.
Original languageEnglish (Ireland)
Title of host publicationHIGH TIME RESOLUTION ASTROPHYSICS
PublisherSpringer
Volume351
ISBN (Electronic)0067-0057
ISBN (Print)0067-0057
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2008

Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)

  • Authors
  • Shearer, A

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