Aa. Deshpande et Jm. Rankin, Pulsar magnetospheric emission mapping: Images find implications of polar cap weather, ASTROPHYS J, 524(2), 1999, pp. 1008-1013
The beautiful sequences of drifting subpulses observed in some radio pulsar
s have been regarded as among the most salient and potentially instructive
characteristics of their emission, not least because they have appeared to
represent a system of subbeams in motion within the emission zone of the st
ar. Numerous studies of these drift sequences have been published, and a mo
del of their generation and motion was articulated long ago by Ruderman & S
utherland; but thus far, efforts have failed to establish an illuminating c
onnection between the drift phenomenon and the actual sites of radio emissi
on. Through a detailed analysis of a nearly coherent sequence of drifting p
ulses from the pulsar B0943 + 10, we have in fact identified a system of su
bbeams circulating around the magnetic axis of the star. A mapping techniqu
e, involving a cartographic transform and its inverse, permits us to study
the character of the polar cap emission map and then to confirm that it, in
turn, represents the observed pulse sequence. On this basis, we have been
able to trace the physical origin of the drifting subpulse emission to a st
ably rotating and remarkably organized configuration of emission columns, i
n turn traceable possibly to the magnetic polar cap gap region envisioned b
y some theories.