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 Дата изменения: Wed Jun 15 19:38:40 2005 Дата индексирования: Sat Dec 22 10:22:33 2007 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: redshift survey  | 
 
 
Andrej Cadez and Mirjam Galicic
  
University of Ljubljana, Department of Physics, Slovenia
Hz is detected. We found a strong
correlation between this 
result and the Fourier transform result of stroboscopic Crab pulsar data
obtained in December 1994 at the 1.82m telescope of Asiago observatory
(University 
of Padua, Italy).
Keywords: pulsars: Crab; stars: neutron
We are looking for possible short-time small-amplitude periodicities in Crab pulsar optical light-curve. We analysed two different types of data: Hubble Space Telescope data which were obtained by the instrument High Speed Photometer in 1993, and stroboscopic photometrical data obtained at the 1.82m telescope in Asiago. We found that both data show a weak modulation at the period of 60 seconds.
 The Hubble data comprise of four approximately half-hour long HSP
runs in visible light (Percival et al. 1993). 
Each of the data sets is organized in two columns: the first one giving
the photon arrival time (
), and the second one the number of  photons
detected at this time (
). 
 We Fourier analysed Hubble data considering the Hubble signal
 to be the function  
 
,
where 
 is the Dirac delta function, so that 
.
 has peaks at 
, where k is an
integer  and P is pulsar's period. The first ten peaks are of about 
equal height while higher frequencies are represented in the signal with much
smaller amplitudes. 
A possible phase or amplitude modulation with frequency 
 would 
show up as two side-bands at frequencies 
. 
We added the side-band spectra of the ten
peaks and subtracted  the central peak. 
In Figure 1 (left side), the sum of spectra  for data sets 2 and 3 is 
shown
.  
 Negative and positive 
frequency amplitudes have been added, so that symmetrical 
peaks, if present, amplify
. 
The 
 
Figure: The sum of  ten side-band spectra for HST data sets 2 and 3 (left:
x-axis gives channel number, units on y-axis are arbitrary), 
and Fourier spectra of pulsar  (number 6) 
and   five other field stars' magnitudes from Asiago (right: x-axis
 is logarithmic, numbers mark period in seconds, units on y-axis
 are arbitrary; the lower horizontal line on each spectrum marks average 
 Fourier amplitude, and the following two lines the +1 sigma and +2 sigma
 levels, respectively).
  
peak  at the channel number 295 
is
 
indicated by an 
arrow. The corresponding frequency is 
 
Hz
  We  observed the Crab pulsar optically with the 1.82m telescope of the
Asiago Observatory (Asiago and Padova Observatories).
A stroboscopic method was
applied, whereby the pulsar   along with a few field stars is monitored
with a CCD camera through a rotating chopper. The chopper blade, which
is frequency and phase controlled by an external clock
to match the phase of the pulsar,
is periodically cutting the light beam to the camera. 
  The chopper blade is open for ten percent
  of the pulsar's period (main pulse) and closed for the remaining part 
  of the period. Thus,
we decreased the  background luminosity of Crab nebula by ten times
which  gave a better signal-to-noise ratio for pulsar  magnitude determination.
In this way we took several hundred consecutive CCD frames.
275 consecutive frames (22.68 seconds apart,
 15 seconds exposure and (on average) 7.68 seconds of image storing) 
 are included in the Fourier analysis of pulsar's magnitude 
  as a function of time. Five other field stars are also analysed in the
  same way for comparison. Figure 1 (right side) shows their Fourier spectra.
 Pulsar magnitude spectrum is indicated by number 6. 
 The pulsar  
 spectrum displays a  3.3-sigma peak at the period of 60 seconds.
 The actual frequency is 
Hz. 
  Its amplitude
 is 
 magnitude.
The search for modulation side-bands in HST data is very different from the modulation search with the Earth-based Asiago telescope. Yet, both searches give the same side-band modulation frequency:


 
Both frequencies are in the same error-box! The same can be said for
corresponding modulation amplitudes, which are: 
 
 and   
.
This work is based in part on observations with the Hubble Space Telescope obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by AURA, Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555. We thank HSP team, R. C. Bless, PI, and in particular J. Dolan for sending us the data, and M. Calvani from Padua Astronomical Observatory for his encouragement. This project is partially supported by EEC grant under contract PECO 94 n.ERBCIPDCT940028.
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