FAST Observation and Results for Core Collapse Globular Cluster M15 and NGC 6517

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FAST Observation and Results for Core Collapse Globular Cluster M15 and NGC 6517

Authors

Yuxiao Wu, Dejiang Yin, Yu Pan, Liyun Zhang, Zhichen Pan, Lei Qian, Baoda Li, Yinfeng Dai, Yaowei Li, Xingnan Zhang, Minghui Li, Yifeng Li

Abstract

Radio astronomy is part of radio science that developed rapidly in recent decades. In the research of radio astronomy, pulsars have always been an enduring popular research target. To find and observe more pulsars, large radio telescopes have been built all over the world. In this paper, we present our studies on pulsars in M15 and NGC 6517 with FAST, including monitoring pulsars in M15 and new pulsar discoveries in NGC 6517. All the previously known pulsars in M15 were detected without no new discoveries. Among them, M15C was still detectable by FAST, while it is assumed to fade out due to precession [1]. In NGC 6517, new pulsars were continues to be discovered and all of them are tend to be isolated pulsars. Currently, the number of pulsars in NGC 6517 is 17, much more than the predicted before [2].

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