The spin-induced quadrupole moment of a rapidly rotating star changes the
orbital dynamics in a binary system, giving rise to advance (or regression) of
periastron and precession of the orbital plane. We show that these effects are
important in the recently discovered radio pulsar/main sequence star binary
system PSR J0045−7319, and can reliably account for the observed peculiar
timing residuals. Precise measurements of the apsidal motion and orbital plane
precession can yield valuable information on the internal structure and
rotation of the star. The detection of orbital precession implies that the spin
of the companion star is not aligned with the orbital angular momentum, and
suggests that the supernova gave the pulsar a kick out of the original orbital
plane. Tidal excitation of g-mode oscillations in the PSR J0045−7319 system
induces an orbital period change of order ∣ΔPorb/Porb∣∼10−6 at each periastron passage, but the secular trend depends on the
radiative damping time of the g-modes. We also discuss the spin-orbit coupling
effects for the accreting X-ray pulsars and the other known radio pulsar/main
sequence binary, PSR B1259−63.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Plain Te