Why the distance of PSR J0218+4232 does not challenge pulsar emission theories
arXiv:1408.0281 · doi:10.1093/mnras/stu1560
Abstract
Recent VLBI measurements of the astrometric parameters of the millisecond pulsar J0218+4232 by Du et al. have suggested this pulsar is as distant as 6.3 kpc. At such a large distance, the large γ-ray flux observed from this pulsar would make it the most luminous γ-ray pulsar known. This luminosity would exceed what can be explained by the outer gap and slot-gap pulsar emission models, potentially placing important and otherwise elusive constraints on the pulsar emission mechanism. We show that the VLBI parallax measurement is dominated by the Lutz-Kelker bias. When this bias is corrected for, the most likely distance for this pulsar is 3.15(+0.85/-0.60) kpc. This revised distance places the luminosity of PSR J0218+4232 into a range where it does not challenge any of the standard theories of the pulsar emission mechanism.
3 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRAS