We present 3 yr of timing observations for PSR J1453+1902, a 5.79-ms pulsar discovered during a 430-MHz drift-scan survey with the Arecibo telescope. Our observations show that PSR J1453+1902 is solitary and has a proper motion of 8 ± 2 mas yr-1. At the nominal distance of 1.2 kpc estimated from the pulsar's dispersion measure, this corresponds to a transverse speed of 46 ± 11 km s-1, typical of the millisecond pulsar population. We analyse the current sample of 55 millisecond pulsars in the Galactic disc and revisit the question of whether the luminosities of isolated millisecond pulsars are different from their binary counterparts. We demonstrate that the apparent differences in the luminosity distributions seen in samples selected from 430-MHz surveys can be explained by small-number statistics and observational selection biases. An examination of the sample from 1400-MHz surveys shows no differences in the distributions. The simplest conclusion from the current data is that the spin, kinematic, spatial and luminosity distributions of isolated and binary millisecond pulsars are consistent with a single homogeneous population. © 2007 RAS.
CITATION STYLE
Lorimer, D. R., McLaughlin, M. A., Champion, D. J., & Stairs, I. H. (2007). PSR J1453+1902 and the radio luminosities of solitary versus binary millisecond pulsars. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 379(1), 282–288. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.11946.x
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