We present the astrometric identification of 80 known radio pulsars as unresolved continuum sources detected at 144,MHz in the second data release of the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS DR2), which covers 27% of the northern hemisphere. These identifications represent the majority (geq86%) of radio pulsars present in the LoTSS DR2 footprint and provide independent celestial positions and flux densities at 144,MHz. We compare LoTSS flux densities with literature values from various image- and time-domain observations and find good agreement for all but two pulsars. We attribute these flux density deviations to intrinsic pulsar properties (nulling and off-pulse emission). We investigate criteria to select promising pulsar candidates using data from the upcoming LoTSS release of the entire northern sky (δ>0°), as well as the LOFAR LBA Sky Survey (LoLSS) at 54,MHz (covering δ>24°). Of the 80 detections, 35 (44%) were blindly redetected based on their linear or circular polarization. Therefore, we conclude that candidate selection based on polarization properties is a promising approach. Candidate selection can be supplemented with spectral indices via cross-matching to LoLSS sources at 54,MHz, as the high sensitivity of LoTSS is not matched by image-domain surveys at higher frequencies.
Rijkers et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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