The Gold Model of A Pulsar2
The Gold Model of A Pulsar2
The Gold Model of A Pulsar2
Anthony Hewish and Jocelyn Bell had found rapid pulsation and the
question was what type of object could be small enough to serve as its
source. In 1968, theoreticians had two possible candidates, the white dwarf
and the neutron star, and a number of different theories sprang up to explain
the nature of pulsars. In the early days after the discovery of CP 1919, a few
more pulsars were found, thus providing further checks and constraints on
the theories; a number of these fell by the wayside in the usual scientific
competition for the survival of the fittest. In particular, it became clear that
the white dwarf could be ruled out and the neutron star, of much smaller
size, was the more likely source. Likewise, the cause of the pulses was found
to be not the oscillations of the star but its fast spin.
A neutron star has two polar axes: a rotational axis and a magnetic
axis. The Earth also has two sets of poles, one from its rotation axis and the
other from the magnetic axis. But unlike the case of the Earth, where the two
axes are nearly aligned, in a typical neutron star the two axes may be
pointing in very different directions.
If we follow the Gold model further, we may ask the question: what
happens to the spinning neutron star as it keeps on radiating for a long time?
Obviously, the process cannot go on forever. Indeed, as time goes on, the
spinning pulsar slows down and its pulse period increases. Thus we can
imagine that the pulsar starts off spinning very fast and, as it ages, it slows
down. A pulsar which has a pulse period of one second today may slow
down to a two-second period after, say, a million years.
This pinning and unpinning process accounts for the steps in rotation
rate which, on average, reverse 2% of the slowdown in rotation for the bulk
of the pulsars. But the glitches in the Crab pulsar are primarily steps in
slowdown rate that are not recovered between glitches. These steps must be
due to changes in magnetic dipole moment M (or in moment of inertia I,
which seems less likely). This appears to be related to the departure of the
observed values of braking index from the theoretical value n = 3, as
observed in the youngest pulsars. This also can be explained by a change in
M, which must be increasing at a rate comparable with the characteristic
slowdown lifetime. The magnetic field within the neutron fluid core of the
star is also quantized; it forms flux tubes which can interact with the
rotational vortices.
The expansion of the rotational vortex network can carry the magnetic
flux from the core into the crust, and increase the dipole moment. It may
also stress the surface of the crust, so that the glitch may involve crust
cracking and a readjustment of the surface distribution of the magnetic field.
The strong linear polarization of both the radio and the optical
emission provides valuable clues to the geometry of the emitting regions. In
a typical radio pulse the plane of polarization swings monotonically through
an S-shape; this is interpreted as the successive observation of narrowly
beamed radiation from sources along a cut across the polar cap. The plane of
polarization is determined by the alignment of the magnetic field at the point
of origin, so that the sweep of polarization can be related to the angle
between the magnetic and rotation axes and their relation to the observer.
Lyne and Manchester showed in this way that the angles between the axes
are widely distributed; there is no evidence, however, that the inclination
angle changes during the lifetime of an individual pulsar. For those pulsars
where the axes are nearly perpendicular a pulse may be observed from both
magnetic poles, while for those in which the rotation and magnetic axes are
nearly aligned the observer must be located close to the rotation axis; in this
case the radio pulse may extend over more than half of the pulse period.
The radio pulses vary erratically in shape and amplitude from pulse to
pulse; however, the integrated profile obtained by adding some hundreds of
pulses is reproducible and characteristic of an individual pulsar. Generally,
these integrated profiles contain several distinct components, known as sub
pulses; these appear to be associated with different regions of the polar cap,
each of which excites radio emission in one narrowly defined direction. If
the excitation of each region varies randomly and independently of the
others, the sum will vary from pulse to pulse, but adding many pulses will
produce an integrated pulse profile which depends only on the average
emission from each region.
Here we have the other extreme where the rotation axis parallels the
magnetic field axis. The assumption of a pure magnetic dipole is obviously
a simplification, but a ubiquitous one. In this model, plasma about the
neutron star plays a central role in the dynamics, unlike the previous model
where it is included more or less incidentally. The source of the plasma was
originally assumed to be from the pulsar surface, owing to the huge
rotationally-induced electric field that would act on the surface if the
surroundings were vacuum. In the usual MHD approximation, one can
directly calculate what the required plasma density has to be through the
assumption that the magnetic field lines have to be equipotentials, the so-
called Goldreich-Julian density. In effect, the plasma is an extension of the
conducting neutron star and must rotate rigidly with the star. Consequently
the pulsar problem seemed to be defined self-consistently because
centrifugal forces would overpower magnetic trapping at or near the so-
called light cylinder distance where co rotation would exceed the speed of
light. The magnetic fields would be forced open as shown in Fig., plasma
would flow out and have to be replaced, and acceleration of plasma from the
surface to do this would be the natural place to look for radio emission.
Indeed a number of subsequent models simply concentrated on these
magnetic polar caps as the site of radio emission
The essential flaw was finally identified, although the resolution was
implicit in a number of suggestions by a number of workers. Ruderman and
coworkers proposed empty gaps in the outer magnetosphere (in order to
accelerate particles sufficiently to make the gamma-rays seen from the Crab
pulsar). Holloway showed by a simple Gedanken Experiment that regions
of the GJ magnetosphere could have empty regions.
Pulsar observers have long assumed that the pulsar magnetic field is in
general neither aligned nor orthogonal but some angle in between. So have
the theorists, except that they held out some hope that these simpler systems
might suffice in themselves and so offer a more tractable system for
analysis. But the above pair avalanching would do little in an aligned rotator
as already recognized: the magnetosphere near the star would fill up but the
distant magnetosphere would not and then the avalanching would cease; a
dead pulsar. In the case of an inclined rotator though, one has the complexity
of no symmetry axis but also the additional physics in the production of very
large amplitude electromagnetic waves by the orthogonal dipole component.
If one imagines an almost-aligned pulsar in which avalanching has
attempted to fill the magnetosphere, the essential thing to notice is that
filling along the rotation axis is much more extensive than filling toward the
light cylinder. The reason is that the electrons on the axis are only confined
to the system by the net system charge. The effect of discharging is to drive
the system charge to zero since positrons can be ejected on field lines
leading beyond the light cylinder and be lost, while the electrons simply
cause the dome to grow. But given a slight inclination, there is additionally
a wave zone.
Thus if the dome were to extend into the wave zone, the electrons
would be driven off by the ponder motive force of the waves. Thus we have
in the inclined case a mechanism for driving off both the electrons and
positrons, with the potential of solving the current closure problem. Note in
this respect that the terminology "light cylinder" serves to focus attention on
the old GJ model's assumption that centrifugal effects were responsible for
pulsar action, as if particles could not be lost unless they reached this
magical distance.
In these pages we have studied about the working of pulsars and some
of the models created to explain these fascinating objects. The next part has
a few statistics about pulsars.