The observed pulsar sample is heavily biased towards the brighter objects that are the easiest to detect.
What we observe represents only the tip of the iceberg of a much larger underlying population [132]. The
bias is well demonstrated by the projection of pulsars onto the Galactic plane shown in Figure 11. The
clustering of sources around the Sun seen in the left panel is clearly at variance with the distribution of
other stellar populations which show a radial distribution symmetric about the Galactic centre. Also
shown in Figure 11
is the cumulative number of pulsars as a function of the projected distance
from the Sun compared to the expected distribution for a simple model population with no
selection effects. The observed number distribution becomes strongly deficient beyond a few
kpc.
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