1,313 research outputs found
Radio pulsars around intermediate mass black holes in super stellar clusters
We study accretion in binaries hosting an intermediate mass black hole (IMBH)
of 1000 solar masses, and a donor star more massive than 15 solar masses. These
systems experience an active X-ray phase characterized by luminosities varying
over a wide interval, from <10^36 erg/s up to a few 10^40 erg/s typical of the
ultra luminous X-ray sources (ULXs). Roche lobe overflow on the zero-age main
sequence and donor masses above 20 solar masses can maintain a long-lived
accretion phase at the level required to feed a ULX source. In wide systems,
wind transfer rates are magnified by the focusing action of the IMBH yielding
wind luminosities around 10^38 erg/s. These high mass-IMBH binaries can be
identified as progenitors of IMBH-radio pulsar (PSR) binaries. We find that the
formation of an IMBH-PSR binary does not necessarely require the transit
through a ULX phase, but that a ULX can highlight a system that will evolve
into an IMBH-PSR, if the mass of the donor star is constrained to lie within 15
to 30 solar masses. We show that binary evolution delivers the pre-exploding
helium core in an orbit such that after explosion, the neutron star has a very
high probability to remain bound to the IMBH, at distances of 1-10 AU. The
detection of an IMBH-PSR binary in the Milky Way has suffered, so far, from the
same small number of statistics limit affecting the population of ULXs in our
Galaxy. Ongoing deeper surveys or next generation radio telescopes like SKA
will have an improved chance to unveil such intriguing systems. Timing analysis
of a pulsar orbiting around an IMBH would weigh the black hole in the still
uncharted interval of mass around 1000 solar massesComment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Few comments
added (minor revision
A tale of two populations: Rotating Radio Transients and X-ray Dim Isolated Neutron Stars
We highlight similarities between recently discovered Rotating Radio
Transients and X-ray Dim Isolated Neutron Stars. In particular, it is shown
that X-ray Dim Isolated Neutron Stars have a birthrate comparable to that of
Rotating Radio Transients. On the contrary, magnetars have too low a formation
rate to account for the bulk of the radio transient population. The
consequences of the recent detection of a thermal X-ray source associated with
one of the Rotating Radio Transients on the proposed scenarios for these
sources are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, accepted to MNRAS Letter
Probing the formation history of the nuclear star cluster at the Galactic Centre with millisecond pulsars
The origin of the Nuclear Star Cluster in the centre of our Galaxy is still
unknown. One possibility is that it formed after the disruption of stellar
clusters that spiralled into the Galactic Centre due to dynamical friction. We
trace the formation of the Nuclear Star Cluster around the central black hole,
using state-of-the-art N-body simulations, and follow the dynamics of the
neutron stars born in the clusters. We then estimate the number of Millisecond
Pulsars (MSPs) that are released in the Nuclear Star Cluster, during its
formation. The assembly and tidal dismemberment of globular clusters lead to a
population of MSPs distributed over a radius of about 20 pc, with a peak near 3
pc. No clustering is found on the sub-parsec scale. We simulate the
detectability of this population with future radio telescopes like the MeerKAT
radio telescope and SKA1, and find that about of order ten MSPs can be observed
over this large volume, with a paucity of MSPs within the central parsec. This
helps discriminating this scenario from the in-situ formation model for the
Nuclear Star Cluster that would predict an over abundance of MSPs closer to the
black hole. We then discuss the potential contribution of our MSP population to
the gamma-ray excess at the Galactic Centre.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Is the Bursting Radio-source GCRT J1745-3009 a Double Neutron Star Binary ?
GCRT J1745-3009 is a peculiar transient radio-source in the direction of the
Galactic Center. It was observed to emit a series of ~ 1 Jy bursts at 0.33 GHz,
with typical duration ~ 10 min and at apparently regular intervals of ~ 77 min.
If the source is indeed at the distance of the Galactic Center as it seems
likely, we show that its observational properties are compatible with those
expected from a double neutron star binary, similar to the double pulsar system
J0737-3039. In the picture we propose the (coherent) radio emission comes from
the shock originating in the interaction of the wind of the more energetic
pulsar with the magnetosphere of the companion. The observed modulation of the
radio signal is the consequence of an eccentric orbit, along which the
separation between the two stars varies. This cyclically drives the shock
inside the light cylinder radius of the less energetic pulsar.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal Letters, comment on geodetic precession adde
X-ray and -ray Studies of the Millisecond Pulsar and Possible X-ray Binary/Radio Pulsar Transition Object PSR J1723-2837
We present X-ray observations of the "redback" eclipsing radio millisecond
pulsar and candidate radio pulsar/X-ray binary transition object PSR
J1723-2837. The X-ray emission from the system is predominantly non-thermal and
exhibits pronounced variability as a function of orbital phase, with a factor
of ~2 reduction in brightness around superior conjunction. Such temporal
behavior appears to be a defining characteristic of this variety of peculiar
millisecond pulsar binaries and is likely caused by a partial geometric
occultation by the main-sequence-like companion of a shock within the binary.
There is no indication of diffuse X-ray emission from a bow shock or pulsar
wind nebula associated with the pulsar. We also report on a search for point
source emission and -ray pulsations in Fermi Large Area Telescope data
using a likelihood analysis and photon probability weighting. Although PSR
J1723-2837 is consistent with being a -ray point source, due to the
strong Galactic diffuse emission at its position a definitive association
cannot be established. No statistically significant pulsations or modulation at
the orbital period are detected. For a presumed source detection, the implied
-ray luminosity is 5% of its spin-down power. This indicates
that PSR J1723-2837 is either one of the least efficient -ray producing
millisecond pulsars or, if the detection is spurious, the -ray emission
pattern is not directed towards us.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
The optical companion to the intermediate mass millisecond pulsar J1439-5501 in the Galactic field
We present the identification of the companion star to the intermediate mass
binary pulsar J1439-5501 obtained by means of ground-based deep images in the
B, V and I bands, acquired with FORS2 mounted at the ESO-VLT. The companion is
a massive white dwarf (WD) with B=23.57+-0.02, V=23.21+-0.01 and I=22.96+-0.01,
located at only ~0.05" from the pulsar radio position. Comparing the WD
location in the (B, B-V) and (V, V-I) Color-Magnitude diagrams with theoretical
cooling sequences we derived a range of plausible combinations of companion
masses (1<~Mcom<~1.3 Msun), distances (d<~1200 pc), radii (<~7.8 10^3 Rsun) and
temperatures (T=31350^{+21500}_{-7400}). From the PSR mass function and the
estimated mass range we also constrained the inclination angle i >~ 55 degrees
and the pulsar mass (Mpsr <~2.2 Msun). The comparison between the WD cooling
age and the spin down age suggests that the latter is overestimated by a factor
of about ten.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ; 19 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
A Search for Pulsars in Quiescent Soft X-Ray Transients. I
We have carried out a deep search at 1.4 GHz for radio pulsed emission from
six soft X-ray transient sources observed during their X-ray quiescent phase.
The commonly accepted model for the formation of the millisecond radio pulsars
predicts the presence of a rapidly rotating, weakly magnetized neutron star in
the core of these systems. The sudden drop in accretion rate associated with
the end of an X-ray outburst causes the Alfv\`en surface to move outside the
light cylinder, allowing the pulsar emission process to operate. No pulsed
signal was detected from the sources in our sample. We discuss several
mechanisms that could hamper the detection and suggest that free-free
absorption from material ejected from the system by the pulsar radiation
pressure could explain our null result.Comment: accepted by Ap
Re-examining the X-Ray versus Spin-Down Luminosity Correlation of Rotation Powered Pulsars
The empirical relation between the X-ray luminosity (in the 2-10 keV band) and the rate of spin-down energy loss of a sample of 37 pulsars is re-examined considering recent data from ASCA, RXTE, BeppoSAX, Chandra, and XMM-Newton. The data show a significant scatter around an average correlation computed including statistical and systematic errors. All the X-ray luminosities are found to lie below a critical line corresponding to a maximum efficiency of conversion of rotational energy into X-rays varying between 0.1 and 80%. The large dispersion of the X-ray luminosity below the critical line indicates that other physical parameters uncorrelated with the period and period derivative need to be included to account for the observed emission at X-ray energies. We indicate a few possibilities that all conspire to lower the luminosity
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