Pulsar giant pulse: coherent instability near light cylinder

2018 
Zebra-pattern-like spectral structures are found in microbursts of the Crab pulsar, which are reminiscent of "zebra bands" in type IV solar radio flares. However, band spacing increases linearly with band-center frequency between $\sim5-30$\,GHz. We propose that the Crab pulsar giant pulse could be originated from the coherent instability of plasma at near light cylinder. Growth of the coherent instability is caused by the resonance between the cyclotron-resonant-excited wave and the background plasma oscillation. In this scenario, the band structures of the Crab pulsar could be well fitted by a coherent instability model where plasma density at light cylinder is required to be $\sim10^{13-15}\,\rm{cm^{-3}}$, with an estimated gradient of $>5.5\times10^5\,\rm{cm^{-4}}$. This process may be accompanied with some high energy emissions. Similar phenomena are expected to be detectable in other type I giant pulse sources which have magnetic fields of $\simeq10^6$\,G at light cylinder.
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