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Radio detection of an elusive millisecond pulsar in the Globular Cluster NGC 6397

Authors :
Zhang, Lei
Ridolfi, Alessandro
Blumer, Harsha
Freire, Paulo
Manchester, Richard N.
McLaughlin, Maura
Kremer, Kyle
Cameron, Andrew D.
Zhang, Zhiyu
Behrend, Jan
Burgay, Marta
Buchner, Sarah
Champion, David J.
Chen, Weiwei
Dai, Shi
Feng, Yi
Fu, Xiaoting
Guo, Meng
Hobbs, George
Keane, Evan F.
Kramer, Michael
Levin, Lina
Li, Xiangdong
Ni, Mengmeng
Pan, Jingshan
Padmanabh, Prajwal V.
Possenti, Andrea
Ransom, Scott M.
Tsai, Chao-Wei
Krishnan, Vivek Venkatraman
Wang, Pei
Zhang, Jie
Zhi, Qijun
Zhang, Yongkun
Li, Di
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the discovery of a new 5.78 ms-period millisecond pulsar (MSP), PSR J1740-5340B (NGC 6397B), in an eclipsing binary system discovered with the Parkes radio telescope (now also known as Murriyang), Australia, and confirmed with the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa. The measured orbital period, 1.97 days, is the longest among all eclipsing binaries in globular clusters (GCs) and consistent with that of the coincident X-ray source U18, previously suggested to be a 'hidden MSP'. Our XMM-Newton observations during NGC 6397B's radio quiescent epochs detected no X-ray flares. NGC 6397B is either a transitional MSP or an eclipsing binary in its initial stage of mass transfer after the companion star left the main sequence. The discovery of NGC 6397B potentially reveals a subgroup of extremely faint and heavily obscured binary pulsars, thus providing a plausible explanation to the apparent dearth of binary neutron stars in core-collapsed GCs as well as a critical constraint on the evolution of GCs.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.07880
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ac81c3