Einstein@Home volunteers have discovered three more new radio pulsars in data from the Parkes Multi-Beam Pulsar Survey (PMPS). Congratulations to:
Further details about these new discoveries can be found on this web page and will be published in due course. These discoveries bring the Einstein@Home discovery total to 9 new radio pulsars in the first two months of 2012!
Bruce Allen
Director, Einstein@Home
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Three new pulsars found in Parkes Multi-Beam Pulsar Survey (PMPS
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Please forgive my naivete, I would like to know how it happens, how specific people get credit when something is found.
Thanks.
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RE: Please forgive my
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Because the relevant work unit - that revealed the pulsar signal - was processed by their computer ( or one registered on their account ). As we duplicate the processing ( two results per quorum ) then there are two discoverers per find. Think of it like a 'lucky dip' ... will the next work unit on your computer be a winner ?:-)
As for the discoveries - WOW !! :-)
Cheers, Mike.
( edit ) Where are these beams pointing galaxy wise, at present ??
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
RE: RE: Please forgive my
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Absolutely right!
Also absolutely right. We are "on a roll'! Nine in 2012 is more than one new pulsar per week.
The observations these days are in the galactic plane, inwards pointing. You can see a map of the Arecibo points we have searched so far here, under Sky Maps at the bottom.
These most recent discoveries are in the Parkes PMPS data, which Einstein@Home finished processing some time ago and which are being post-processed by a new method, originally developed for the PALFA/Arecibo data.
Cheers,
Bruce
Director, Einstein@Home
WOW! This is really a nice
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WOW! This is really a nice set of discoveries. Congrats to all involved!
so if you process more data
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so if you process more data for the project the more of a chance you have at finding some thing..
thanks for the input..
Nice going. Had me exited
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Nice going. Had me exited there before I realized you reanimated a ONE YEAR old post.
BTW. Isn't it time for a new batch of discoveries soon? :)
RE: Isn't it time for a new
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Well, we are currently processing mostly "outer galaxy" beams from the Arecibo survey, where (detectable) pulsars are expected to be much rarer than towards the center of our galaxy.
While it's a bit quieter on the discovery front, we are doing the paperwork that piled up and prepare new data to process.
BM
BM