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PSR J1930-1852: a pulsar in the widest known orbit around another neutron star

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 Added by Joseph Swiggum
 Publication date 2015
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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In the summer of 2012, during a Pulsar Search Collaboratory workshop, two high-school students discovered J1930$-$1852, a pulsar in a double neutron star (DNS) system. Most DNS systems are characterized by short orbital periods, rapid spin periods and eccentric orbits. However, J1930$-$1852 has the longest spin period ($P_{rm spin}sim$185 ms) and orbital period ($P_{rm b}sim$45 days) yet measured among known, recycled pulsars in DNS systems, implying a shorter than average and/or inefficient recycling period before its companion went supernova. We measure the relativistic advance of periastron for J1930$-$1852, $dot{omega}=0.00078$(4) deg/yr, which implies a total mass (M$_{rm{tot}}=2.59$(4) M$_{odot}$) consistent with other DNS systems. The $2sigma$ constraints on M$_{rm{tot}}$ place limits on the pulsar and companion masses ($m_{rm p}<1.32$ M$_{odot}$ and $m_{rm c}>1.30$ M$_{odot}$ respectively). J1930$-$1852s spin and orbital parameters challenge current DNS population models and make J1930$-$1852 an important system for further investigation.



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We present new X-ray timing and spectral observations of PSR J1930+1852, the young energetic pulsar at the center of the non-thermal supernova remnant G54.1+0.3. Using data obtained with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer and Chandra X-ray observatories we have derived an updated timing ephemeris of the 136 ms pulsar spanning 6 years. During this interval, however, the period evolution shows significant variability from the best fit constant spin-down rate of $dot P = 7.5112(6) times 10^{-13}$ s s$^{-1}$, suggesting strong timing noise and/or glitch activity. The X-ray emission is highly pulsed ($71pm5%$ modulation) and is characterized by an asymmetric, broad profile ($sim 70%$ duty cycle) which is nearly twice the radio width. The spectrum of the pulsed emission is well fitted with an absorbed power law of photon index $Gamma = 1.2pm0.2$; this is marginally harder than that of the unpulsed component. The total 2-10 keV flux of the pulsar is $1.7 times 10^{-12}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$. These results confirm PSR J1930+1852 as a typical Crab-like pulsar.
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