1. Introduction
The positions and proper motions of hundreds of pulsars have been determined using the analysis of pulsar timing residuals (e.g. Hobbs et al. 2004) and very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) imaging (e.g. Deller et al. 2019). However, in some cases, the pulsar suffers strong scattering effects from plasma along the line of sight. This condition scatters the radio image of the pulsar up to arcsec angular dimensions, ruling out the possibility of VLBI imaging. For some sources it has been possible to make images with connected interferometers (i.e. the Very Large Array), since these observations do not resolve out the scattered emission (e.g. Dzib et al. 2018). Multiple examples of pulsars whose proper motions have been determined with the Very Large Array are given by Brisken et al. (2003). The presence of inhomogeneous plasma in the line of sight also limits the timing method by broadening the pulses to a level that makes timing experiments difficult or impossible.
PSR B1849+00 (PSR J1852+00) is a pulsar that has a period of 2.18 s and a characteristic age of 105.55 yr (Taylor et al. 1993). It is located in a region of enhanced line-of-sight interstellar scattering (Lazio 2004) that makes it one of the most heavily scattered pulsar known, with a pulse broadening time of 0.22 seconds at 1.4 GHz (Löhmer et al. 2001). It has a large dispersion measure, DM = 787 cm−3 pc (Han et al. 2016). Only seven of the 228 pulsars studied by these authors have larger dispersion measures.
In this paper we present an analysis of archive Very Large Array data with the goal of determining the proper motion of PSR B1849+00 and possibly advance in our understanding of the supernova that created this pulsar.
2. VLA Observations
We searched unsuccessfully in the archives of the Karl G. Jansky VLA of NRAO4 for observations made with the highest angular resolution A configuration pointing toward PSR B1849+00. We found, however, several good quality A configuration observations made in the L-band (1-2 GHz) with the phase center at the position of the gain calibrator J1851+0035. Although J1851+0035 is located at ≈ 11′ from PSR B1849+00 we could obtain images of good quality over the full extent of the primary beam (≈ 30′). This was possible because the Jansky VLA records the continuum data in narrow channels (2 MHz), that do not produce significant bandwidth smearing. For all observations the position of J1851+0035 used was the updated position given in the VLA Calibrator Manual, RA(J2000) = 18 h 51 m 46 s .7217; DEC(J2000) = 00°35′32′′.414. The data were calibrated in the standard manner using the CASA (Common Astronomy Software Applications; McMullin et al. 2007) package of NRAO and the pipeline provided for VLA5 observations. We obtained images using a robust weighting (Briggs 1995) of 0 to optimize the compromise between angular resolution and sensitivity. All images were also corrected for the primary beam response. Finally, the images were also corrected for widefield effects using the gridding option widefield with 10×10 subregions in the task TCLEAN (Rodriguez et al. 2023).
3. Discussion
In Table 1 we list the five projects found, indicating the name of the project, its mean epoch, frequency, synthesized beam, and flux density. We finally give the position of PSR B1949+00 for each epoch. In Figure 1 we show a contour image of the source from project 22A-097. In Figure 2 we present the positions as a function of time for PSR B1949+00. In Table 2 we give the equatorial proper motions obtained from a least-squares fit to the positions shown in Figure 2. In this table we can see that PSR B1949+00 has a statistically significant equatorial total proper motion (4.3σ).
TABLE 1 PARAMETERS OF THE JANSKY VLA OBSERVATIONS
| Project | Mean Epoch | ν (GHz) | Synthesized Beam | Flux Density (mJy) | Position of PSR B1849+00 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RA(J2000)a | DEC(J2000)b | |||||
| 12B-225 | 2012.779 | 1.50 |
|
3.51±0.33 | 2 |
0 |
| 14A-404 | 2014.362 | 1.52 |
|
4.74±0.20 | 2 |
0 |
| 15A-301 | 2015.630 | 1.50 |
|
6.04±1.00 | 2 |
0 |
| 19A-386 | 2019.647 | 1.57 |
|
3.92±0.32 | 2 |
0 |
| 22A-097 | 2022.474 | 1.52 |
|
2.42±0.21 | 2 |
0 |
a Offset from RA(J2000) = 18 h 52 m 00 s .
b Offset from DEC(J2000) = +00◦32′00′′.

Fig. 1 Very Large Array contour image of PSR B1849+00 at 1.52 GHz for epoch
2022.474. Contours are −3, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, and 20 times 100
µJy beam−1, the rms noise in this region
of the image. The synthesized beam (

Fig. 2 Right ascension (left) and declination (right) of PSR B1849+00 as a function of time. The dashed lines indicate the least squares fit for each parameter. The resulting proper motions are given in Table 2.
TABLE 2 POSITION AND PROPER MOTIONS OF PSR B1849+00
| Positiona | Equatorial Proper Motionsd | Corrected Galactic Proper Motionsd | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RA(J2000) b | DEC(J2000) c | µ RA cos(DEC) | µ DEC | µ TOTAL | PAe | µ l cos(b) | µ b | µ TOTAL | PAe |
| 2 |
0 |
-19.1±6.4 | -14.4±3.2 | 23.9±5.5 | 233° ± 9° | -14.6±5.8 | +10.4±4.2 | 17.9±5.3 | 305° ± 15° |
a For epoch 2000.0.
b Offset from RA(J2000) = 18 h 52 m 00 s .
c Offset from DEC(J2000) = +00°32′ 00′′.
d In mas yr−1.
e Position angle of the proper motion vector in the respective coordinates.
The weighted mean flux density and weighted mean standard deviation at 1.5 GHz over the five epochs are 3.7±1.1 mJy for PSR B1949+00. The spectral index can be used to further define the nature of the radio source. Kijak et al. (2011) report a spectral index of α = −2.4 for this source, a steep value characteristic of pulsars (e.g. Taylor et al. 1993; Maron et al. 2000).
4. The Transverse Velocity of PSR B1849+00
The distance of PSR B1849+00 has been estimated by several groups. We weight-averaged the results of Cordes & Lazio (2003), Verbiest et al. (2012), Yao et al. (2017), Pynzar (2020) and Kütükcü et al. (2022), listed in Table 3, to obtain a value of 8.6±1.7 kpc.
TABLE 3 DISTANCE ESTIMATES TO PSR B1849+00
| Distance(kpc) | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 8.4±1.7 | Dispersion measure model | Cordes & Lazio (2003) |
| 8.0±2.0 | HI absorption | Verbiest et al. (2012) |
| 7.0±1.0 | HI absorption | Yao et al. (2017) |
| 10.7± 0.9 | Dispersion measure model | Pynzar et al. (2020) |
| 7.0±1.5 | Dispersion measure model | Kütükcü et al. (2022) |
The total proper motion of PSR B1949+00 has to be corrected for the proper motion contribution due to the kinematics of the Galaxy in order to obtain the peculiar proper motion. We use a distance from the Sun to the center of the Galaxy of 8.15 kpc and a circular rotation velocity at the Sun of 236 km s−1 (Reid et al. 2019). We also assume a flat rotation curve outside the tangent point (with a galactocentric distance of 4.6 kpc in the direction of the pulsar) and that the H I disk of the Galaxy has an outer radius of 13.4 kpc (Goodwin, Gribbin, & Hendry 1998). In Figure 3 we show the proper motion in galactic longitude for a circular Galactic orbit as a function of distance in the direction of PSR B1949+00. At the distance of the pulsar, 8.6 kpc, a galactic longitude proper motion of −6.9 mas yr−1 is expected. We have corrected the galactic proper motion of PSR B1949+00 for this effect to obtain the values given in Table 2. This correction reduces the total proper motion from 23.9 mas yr−1 to 17.9 mas yr−1. This is the peculiar proper motion of the pulsar.

Fig. 3 Galactic longitude proper motion in the direction of PSRB1849+00 as a function of distance to the Sun. This theoretical curve is based on the Galactic model for circular motion described in the text.
At the distance of 8.6 kpc the corrected total proper motion implies a peculiar velocity of 740±220 km s−1 in the plane of the sky. The large error comes from propagating the errors in the proper motion and in the distance. The Australia Telescope National Facility Pulsar Catalogue (Manchester et al. 2005) lists a total of 294 pulsars with reported transverse velocities. Of these pulsars, 15 (5%) equal or exceed 740 km s−1.
5. The Possible Origin of PSR B1849+00
In Figure 4 we plot the position and proper motion of PSR B1849+00, superposed on a GLOSTAR image at 5.8 GHz (Medina et al. 2019; Brunthaler et al. 2021; Medina et al. 2024). In this image we also mark with circles supernova remnants and candidate supernova remnants in the region.

Fig. 4 Position (red dot) and proper motion of PSR B1849+00 for a period of 105 yr (white arrow) in galactic coordinates and superposed on a GLOSTAR image. The dashed lines indicate the ±1-σ angular range for the past trajectory of the pulsar. The dashed curved lines indicate the ±1-σ distance range for the origin of the pulsar assuming an age of 105.55 yr, the characteristic age of the pulsar. These dashed lines define the most likely area in the sky for the origin of the pulsar, shown in yellow. The white circles indicate the position and extent of confirmed supernova remnants (Green 2022), while the green and cyan circles indicate candidate supernova remnants from Dokara et al. (2021) and Anderson et al. (2017), respectively.
The sources best aligned with the past trajectory of PSR B1849+00 are the W44 remnant
and the supernova remnant candidate G34.524-0.761. Taking the characteristic age of
105.55 yr and the corrected total proper motion given in Table 2, we find that assuming a ballistic
motion the origin would be located at ≈
However, the distance of W44 appears to be well established at ≃3 kpc (Radhakrishnan et al. 1972; Caswell et al. 1975; Cox et al. 1999; Su et al. 2014; Wang et al. 2020). The first four groups used HI absorption observations and a model of the Galactic kinematics, while the last one used the extinction to red clump stars (Paczyński & Stanek 1998) probably associated with the supernova. This significantly different distance seems to rule out an association of W44 with PSR B1849+00. In any case, it would be valuable to estimate the distance to W44 by parallax measurements of the OH 1720 MHz masers associated with it. Also W44, whose age is estimated to be ≃20,000 yr (Smith et al. 1985; Cox et al. 1999; Giuliani et al. 2011), seems to be much younger that the pulsar and this result also gravitates against an association. The supernova age is estimated from observations of its size, expansion rate, and the properties of the surrounding interstellar medium.
The distance to G34.524-0.761 is not yet determined. This source has a spectral index of -0.9 and exhibits a 10% degree of linear polarization (Dokara et al. 2023), supporting the supernova remnant interpretation. However, as noted by these authors, its filamentary morphology suggests that it is probably a fragment of a much larger faint remnant. We conclude that we cannot clearly associate a supernova remnant with PSR B1849+00. It is probable that the related supernova remnant has mixed with the interstellar medium and is no longer detectable.
The Next Generation VLA (Murphy et al. 2018), with its unprecedented sensitivity and high angular resolution will be the ideal instrument for the study of the proper motions of pulsars whose images and pulses are scattered by inhomogeneous plasma in the line of sight.
6. Conclusions
(1) We analyzed archive VLA observations of the pulsar PSR B1849+00 to obtain its radio proper motions. At a distance of 8.6 kpc the resulting peculiar velocity in the plane of the sky is ≃740 km s−1.
(2) We searched unsuccessfully along the past trajectory of PSR B1849+00 for a supernova remnant that could be associated with this pulsar. The bright supernova remnant W44 is in the past trajectory of the pulsar, but its distance is different. We suggest that the remnant that originated PSR B1849+00 has dissipated and is no longer detectable.










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