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Pulsar timing experiments typically generate a phase-connected timing solution from a sequence of times of arrival (TOAs) by absolute pulse numbering, i.e., by fitting an integer number of pulses between TOAs in order to minimize the residuals with respect to a parameterized phase model. In this observing mode, rotational glitches are discovered, when the residuals of the no-glitch phase model diverge after some epoch, and glitch parameters are refined by Bayesian follow-up. Here, we present an alternative, complementary approach which tracks the pulse frequency f and its time derivative f with a hidden Markov model (HMM), whose dynamics include stochastic spin wandering (timing noise) and impulsive jumps in f and f (glitches). The HMM tracks spin wandering explicitly, as a specific realization of a discrete-time Markov chain. It discovers glitches by comparing the Bayes factor for glitch and no-glitch models. It ingests standard TOAs for convenience, and being fully automated, allows performance bounds to be calculated quickly via Monte Carlo simulations. Practical, user-oriented plots of the false-alarm probability and detection threshold (e.g., minimum resolvable glitch size) versus observational scheduling parameters (e.g., TOA uncertainty, mean delay between TOAs) and glitch parameters (e.g., transient and permanent jump sizes, exponential recovery timescale) are presented. The HMM is also applied to ∼1 yr of real data bracketing the 2016 December 12 glitch in PSR J0835-4510 as a proof of principle. It detects the known glitch and confirms that no other glitch exists in the same data with size ⪆10-7 f.

Original publication

DOI

10.3847/1538-4357/ab9178

Type

Journal article

Journal

Astrophysical Journal

Publication Date

10/06/2020

Volume

896