S. V. Logvinenko
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by S. V. Logvinenko.
Astronomy Reports | 2012
V. M. Malofeev; D. A. Teplykh; S. V. Logvinenko
We report the results of new observations of three anomalous X-ray pulsars: 1E 2259+586, 4U 0142+61, and XTE J1810-197. The observations were carried out on high-sensitivity radio telescopes of the Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory: the Large Phased Array at 111MHz and the DKR-1000 at 62 MHz. New, digital, multi-channel receivers designed for pulsar observations were used. Pulse profiles and dynamical spectra for the three pulsars are presented. The mean flux density for XTE J1810-197 is estimated to be ∼160 mJy at 62 MHz. An estimated spectral index for this pulsar is also presented.
Astronomy Reports | 2012
S. A. Suleymanova; S. V. Logvinenko; T. V. Smirnova
The pulse structure of the pulsar B1822-09 has been studied at 112, 62, and 42 MHz. The observations were conducted in 2010 on the Large Scanning Antenna and the DKR-1000 radio telescope of the Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory. The shape of the main pulse and interpulse undergo considerable changes at low radio frequencies. In the main pulse, the precursor disappears and is replaced by a new component that trails 50 ms behind the main component. At 62 MHz, the interpulse acquires a pronounced two-peaked shape. At 62 and 112 MHz, as well as at higher frequencies, the brighter second component of the interpulse follows the main pulse at 185° and has a relative amplitude of about 5%. The main pulse width changes with frequency according to the power law W0.5 ∼ ν−0.15 in the frequency range 42–4750-MHz. The interpulse width follows this law only in the range 325–4750 MHz; at 112, 102, and 62 MHz, the interpulse is almost a factor of three broader than themain pulse. The parameters of the pulse’s scattering on interstellar plasma inhomogeneities and the initial pulse width before it enters the scattering medium have been measured at 62 and 42 MHz. The frequency dependence of the characteristic scale for scattering of the pulses of B1822-09 corresponds to a Kolmogorov spectrum for the electron-density fluctuations in the interstellar medium in the direction toward this pulsar.
Astronomy Reports | 2016
V. I. Shishov; I. V. Chashei; V. V. Oreshko; S. V. Logvinenko; S. A. Tyul’bashev; P. M. Svidskii; V. B. Lapshin; R. D. Dagkesamanskii
The design properties and technical characteristics of the upgraded Large Phased Array (LPA) are briefly described. The results of an annual cycle of observations of interplanetary scintillations of radio sources on the LPA with the new 96-beam BEAM 3 system are presented. Within a day, about 5000 radio sources displaying second-timescale fluctuations in their flux densities due to interplanetary scintillations were observed. At present, the parameters of many of these radio sources are unknown. Therefore, the number of sources with root-mean-square flux-density fluctuations greater than 0.2 Jy in a 3° × 3° area of sky was used to characterize the scintillation level. The observational data obtained during the period of the maximum of solar cycle 24 can be interpreted using a three-component model for the spatial structure of the solar wind, consisting of a stable global component, propagating disturbances, and corotating structures. The global component corresponds to the spherically symmetric structure of the distribution of the turbulent interplanetary plasma. Disturbances propagating from the Sun are observed against the background of the global structure. Propagating disturbances recorded at heliocentric distances of 0.4–1 AU and at all heliolatitudes reach the Earth’s orbit one to two days after the scintillation enhancement. Enhancements of ionospheric scintillations are observed during night-time. Corotating disturbances have a recurrence period of 27d. Disturbances of the ionosphere are observed as the coronal base of a corotating structure approaches the western edge of the solar limb.
Astronomy Reports | 2016
S. A. Tyul’bashev; V. S. Tyul’bashev; V. V. Oreshko; S. V. Logvinenko
The first results of a search for pulsars using the Large Phased Array of the Lebedev Physical Institute at 111 MHz for right ascensions 0h-24h and declinations 21°-42° are reported. Data with a time resolution of 100 ms in six frequency channels within a 2.5-MHz frequency band have been processed. Thirty-four pulsars have been detected, of which seventeen were observed on this telescope earlier; ten known pulsars had not been observed earlier. Seven new pulsars have been discovered.
Astronomy Reports | 2011
A. D. Kuz’min; Yu. A. Belyatsky; D. V. Dumsky; V. A. Izvekova; K. A. Lapaev; S. V. Logvinenko; B. Ya. Losovsky; V. D. Pugachev
Results of long-term (2002–2010) monitoring of giant radio pulses of the pulsar PSR B0531+21 in the Crab Nebula at ν = 44, 63, and 111 MHz are reported. The observations were conducted on the LPA and DKR-1000 radio telescopes of the Lebedev Physical Institute. The giant pulses were analyzed using specialized software for calculating the magnitude of the scattering τsc, signal-to-noise ratio, and other required parameters by modeling the propagation of a pulse in the scattering interstellar medium. Three pronounced sharp increases in the scattering were recorded in 2002–2010. Analysis of the dependence between the variations of the scattering and dispersion measure (data of Jodrell Bank Observatory) shows a strong correlation at all frequencies, ≈0.9. During periods of anomalous increase in scattering and the dispersion measure, the index γ in the frequency dependence of the scattering in the Crab Nebula, τsc(ν) ∝ ν−γ, was smaller than the generally accepted values γ = 4.0 for a Gaussian and γ = 4.4 for a Kolmogorov distribution. This difference in combination with the piece-wise power-law spectrum may be due to the presence of a dense plasma structure with developed Langmuir turbulence in the nebula, along the pulsar’s line of sight. The magnetic field in the Crab Nebula estimated from measurements of the rotation measure toward the pulsar is 100 µG.
Astronomy Reports | 2009
T. V. Smirnova; S. V. Logvinenko
Three series of 111.88 MHz observations of giant pulses of PSR B0531+21 have been carried out in 2005 and 2007. The scattering of pulses observed in various series varies by a factor of 1.7: 10.6±0.5 ms in November 2005, 18±1 ms in January 2007, and 16±0.8 ms in June 2007. The cumulative probability distribution for the peak intensities of the giant pulses for each of these series shows that the distribution is stable and is a power law with a single slope (n = 2.3). This testifies to stability of the mechanism generating the giant pulses. The distribution functions for the 2005 and 2007 data can be superposed after correcting the intensities with a coefficient equal to the ratio of the effective pulse widths. Consequently, in the range of 23MHz-9GHz the energy in the pulses is conserved; i.e., the increase in the pulse intensity is proportional to the decrease in the scattering. Refractive scintillations at low frequencies in measurements with large time separation lead to variations in the number of giant pulses exceeding a given amplitude, proportional to the ratio of the mean flux densities of the pulsar in the corresponding observational series. The maximum energy of the recorded giant pulses is 2.5 × 107 Jy µs. A comparison with the statistical properties of the giant pulses observed at other frequencies shows that the frequency dependence of the maximum energy of the giant pulses in the range of 23 MHz-9GHz is a power-law with index 2.2±0.2. The degree of linear polarization of the giant pulses at 112 MHz does not exceed 12%.
Astronomy Reports | 2008
A. D. Kuz’min; B. Ya. Losovskii; S. V. Logvinenko; I. I. Litvinov
Our measurements of the arrival-time delays of radio pulses from the Crab pulsar, PSR B0531+21, at low frequencies 111, 63, and 44 MHz revealed additional delays compared to the usual quadratic frequency relation, Δt(v) ∝ v−2. These additional delays are 65 ms between 63 MHz and 111 MHz—i.e., a factor of two longer than the pulsar’s period, i.e., a factor of five longer than the pulsar period—and cannot be explained by the “twisting” of the magnetic-field lines by the rotation of the pulsar. We suggest the model in which a previously unknown high-density plasma layer with a high electron concentration is present along the line of sight in the Crab nebula, causing an additional frequency-dependent delay of the observed radio pulses at low frequencies due to the contribution of the ne2v−4 term in the dispersion-delay formula. The parameters of this inferred layer have been derived: emission measure EM ≅ 4 × 106 pc/cm6, electron density ne ≅ 106 cm−3, depth along the line of sight d ≅ 4 × 10−6 pc, and electron temperature Te ≥ 2 × 106 K.
Astronomy Reports | 2015
O. I. Malov; V. M. Malofeev; D. A. Teplykh; S. V. Logvinenko
New detections of radio emission from the Geminga pulsar at three low radio frequencies are presented. The observations were carried out at 42–112 MHz on two sensitive transit radio telescopes of the Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory. Three new digital receivers were used to detect the pulses and obtain dynamical spectra. Examples of mean profiles and individual pulses of Geminga are presented. Dynamical spectra at these three frequencies are presented for the first time. The availability of simultaneous observations at three frequencies has made it possible to refine the pulsar’s dispersion measure.
Astronomy Reports | 2010
A. D. Kuz’min; Ya. N. Istomin; B. Ya. Losovskiȝ; S. V. Logvinenko; D. V. Dumskiȝ
The frequency dependence of scattering of the radio emission from the Crab pulsar at the low frequencies 111, 63, and 44 MHz has been measured and analyzed during sporadic enhancements of scattering and dispersion measure in October–December 2006 and December 2008. The frequency dependence of the scattering differs from the generally accepted dependence, τsc(ν) ∝ νγ, where γ = −4.0 for Gaussian and γ = −4.4 for power-law Kolmogorov distributions of inhomogeneities of the scattering medium. In intervals of enhancement, the exponent of the frequency dependence γ decreased to −3.2(0.2) at the above frequencies. A model is proposed in which this is due to the presence of a dense plasma structure in the nebula in the line of sight toward the pulsar, in which scattering of the radio emission on turbulence differs from scattering in the interstellar medium. It is shown that the frequency dependence of scattering of the radio emission can be weaker in a dense plasma than in the rarefied interstellar medium.
Astronomy Reports | 2016
B. Ya. Losovskii; D. V. Dumskii; S. V. Logvinenko
An analysis of monitoring observations for the pulsar PSR B0655+64, which is located in a binary system, at 111 MHz during 2002–2015 are presented. The Keplerian parameters of the pulsar have been refived: the longitude of periastron ω = 276.°5785 ± 0.°0005 and the orbital semi-major axis is ap sin i = 4.124976± 0.000003 s. The parameters of the perturbed motion have been determined: the motion of periastron ω = 0.°315 ± 0.°005/ year, and the derivative of the period of the binary system Ṗ = (-1.66 ± 0.11) × 10-14 s/s = (-0.524 ± 0.038) µs/year. The estimated time scale for the decay of the PSR 0655+64 system is (1.7 ± 0.1) × 1011 yrs.