论文标题
在费米 - 拉特不明的来源中发现了八个二元毫秒的脉冲星的时间
Timing of Eight Binary Millisecond Pulsars Found with Arecibo in Fermi-LAT Unidentified Sources
论文作者
论文摘要
我们提出了通过使用Arecibo 305-m射电望远镜的327 MHz接收器搜索未识别的Fermi-LAT源位置发现的八个二元脉冲星(MSP)的定时解决方案。五个脉冲星是轨道周期短于8.1 h的“蜘蛛”。其中三个是在“黑寡妇”系统中(具有0.02-0.03太阳能团体的退化伴侣),一个是在“红背”系统中(具有$ \ gtrsim 0.3 $太阳能团体的非脱位伴侣),一个(J1908+2105)是两个观察类别之间的(J1908+2105)。其余三个脉冲星有白矮人的伴侣和更长的轨道时期。使用最初得出的无线定时解决方案,我们检测到来自所有MSP的伽马射线脉动,并使用来自Fermi的全部任务中的光子扩展了定时溶液,从而证实了这些MSP的识别,并用Fermi-Lat源识别。在其轨道时期的50%期间,闪烁的无线电发射被黯然失色,这对于这种系统是典型的。两个黑寡妇展示了持续10-20%轨道的无线电蚀,而J1908+2105叶子以40%的轨道蚀了。我们研究了银河磁盘中已知的二元MSP之间伽马射线排放与短轨道时期之间的明显联系,并得出结论,不能将选择效应排除为原因。基于此分析,我们概述了如何在正在进行的和未来的Pulsar搜索中改善新MSP发现的可能性。
We present timing solutions for eight binary millisecond pulsars (MSPs) discovered by searching unidentified Fermi-LAT source positions with the 327 MHz receiver of the Arecibo 305-m radio telescope. Five of the pulsars are "spiders" with orbital periods shorter than 8.1 h. Three of these are in "black widow" systems (with degenerate companions of 0.02-0.03 solar masses), one is in a "redback" system (with a non-degenerate companion of $\gtrsim 0.3$ solar masses), and one (J1908+2105) is an apparent middle-ground case between the two observational classes. The remaining three pulsars have white dwarf companions and longer orbital periods. With the initially derived radio timing solutions, we detected gamma-ray pulsations from all MSPs and extended the timing solutions using photons from the full Fermi mission, thus confirming the identification of these MSPs with the Fermi-LAT sources. The radio emission of the redback is eclipsed during 50% of its orbital period, which is typical for this kind of system. Two of the black widows exhibit radio eclipses lasting for 10-20% of the orbit, while J1908+2105 eclipses for 40% of the orbit. We investigate an apparent link between gamma-ray emission and a short orbital period among known binary MSPs in the Galactic disk, and conclude that selection effects cannot be ruled out as the cause. Based on this analysis we outline how the likelihood of new MSP discoveries can be improved in ongoing and future pulsar searches.