Pulsar Science with CHIME
Chia Min Tan
TSI & McGill Physics


The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) is a transit radio inteferometer operating at frequencies of 400-800 MHz, with an instantaneous field of view (FoV) of 120 degrees North-South and 1.3-2.5 degrees East-West. While CHIME is primarily designed to study dark energy through the measurement of the evolution of baryon acoustic oscillations, it is also home to the CHIME/FRB, CHIME/Pulsar and CHIME Slow Pulsar Search (CHIME/SPS) projects. CHIME/Pulsar takes data from 10 simultaneous and independently formed beams from CHIME that track sources as they cross CHIME?s FoV to observe pulsars and FRBs. CHIME/SPS taps into the continuous 1ms resolution data stream from the CHIME Fast Radio Burst pipeline to search for new pulsars across the whole Northern Sky repeatedly. In this talk I will describe the operation, as well as the scientific goals and outputs from both systems.

Date: Mardi, 18 avril 2023
Time: 15:30
Where: McGill University
  Bell Room (Rutherford Physics Building, room 103)