SIMBAD references

2001MNRAS.325..979S - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 325, 979-988 (2001/August-2)

PSR J1740-3052: a pulsar with a massive companion.

STAIRS I.H., MANCHESTER R.N., LYNE A.G., KASPI V.M., CAMILO F., BELL J.F., D'AMICO N., KRAMER M., CRAWFORD F., MORRIS D.J., POSSENTI A., McKAY N.P.F., LUMSDEN S.L., TACCONI-GARMAN L.E., CANNON R.D., HAMBLY N.C. and WOOD P.R.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on the discovery of a binary pulsar, PSR J1740-3052, during the Parkes multibeam survey. Timing observations of the 570-ms pulsar at Jodrell Bank and Parkes show that it is young, with a characteristic age of 350kyr, and is in a 231-d, highly eccentric orbit with a companion whose mass exceeds 11M. An accurate position for the pulsar was obtained using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. Near-infrared 2.2-µm observations made with the telescopes at the Siding Spring observatory reveal a late-type star coincident with the pulsar position. However, we do not believe that this star is the companion of the pulsar, because a typical star of this spectral type and required mass would extend beyond the orbit of the pulsar. Furthermore, the measured advance of periastron of the pulsar suggests a more compact companion, for example, a main-sequence star with radius only a few times that of the Sun. Such a companion is also more consistent with the small dispersion measure variations seen near periastron. Although we cannot conclusively rule out a black hole companion, we believe that the companion is probably an early B star, making the system similar to the binary PSR J0045-7319.

Abstract Copyright: The Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): binaries: general - stars: late-type - stars: mass-loss - pulsars: general - pulsars: individual: PSR J1740-3052 - X-rays: stars

Simbad objects: 6

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