November 25, 2024

Why Have Pulsars “Gone Missing” – A New Finding Offers Some Answers

By National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences
September 15, 2022

An artists concept of a pulsar.
New finding uses clues to “missing out on” pulsars.
MSPs, or millisecond pulsars, are evolved neutron stars with quick spin periods that went through substantial mass transfer during a low-mass X-ray binary stage. MSP formation often occurs in globular clusters (GCs), which are collections of tens of thousands or millions of stars. Till just recently, just one MSP had actually been found in NGC 6397, one of the two GCs nearby to Earth.
Now, researchers not only have discovered a second pulsar in our surrounding GC, but they likewise comprehend more about why other pulsars have “gone missing.”
Dr. Zhang Lei of the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) determined a new 5.78 ms-period MSP in an eclipsing double star while observing NGC 6397 with the Parkes radio telescope in Australia. The MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa confirmed this finding.

MSPs, or millisecond pulsars, are evolved neutron stars with short spin durations that went through substantial mass transfer during a low-mass X-ray binary stage. NGC 6397B is only detectable when the pulsar is on the side of its orbit that is closest to the viewer. A noteworthy quality of NGC 6397B is the faintness of its radio signal and extended radio-quiescent durations. The researchers suggested that NGC 6397B may represent a subgroup of exceptionally faint and greatly obscured binary pulsars. According to the researchers, this could explain the evident oversupply of isolated pulsars in the thick cores of GCs, where outstanding interactions are anticipated to preferentially result in binaries.

NGC 6397B is only noticeable when the pulsar is on the side of its orbit that is closest to the viewer. The current study has validated that U18 is NGC 6397B.
Radio detection of an evasive millisecond pulsar, PSR J1740-5340B (NGC 6397B), in the Globular Cluster NGC 6397 with the Parkes radio telescope in Australia. Credit: NAOC/ScienceApe
The work was just recently released in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Prof. Li Di of NAOC, the corresponding author, organized the very first coherently de-dispersed look for new pulsars in NGC 6397 utilizing the ultra-wideband low (UWL) receiver system just recently set up on the Parkes radio telescope.
Dr. Zhang found the brand-new pulsar using information from the Parkes radio telescopes preliminary observation on April 12, 2019. Over a three-year period, the Parkes radio telescope made 39 observations, along with two observations from the MeerKAT radio telescope.
A significant quality of NGC 6397B is the faintness of its radio signal and extended radio-quiescent durations. The scientists recommended that NGC 6397B might represent a subgroup of extremely faint and greatly obscured binary pulsars. According to the scientists, this might describe the obvious surplus of isolated pulsars in the thick cores of GCs, where outstanding interactions are anticipated to preferentially result in binaries. In other words, binaries may not be absent– they may just be tough to discover.
According to the researchers, these faint pulsars are hard to get in radio bands either since they are embedded in clouds of plasma or are actively accreting matter due to their companion stars.
Future research might test whether these descriptions correctly describe why few binary pulsars have actually been found in GCs.
Recommendation: “Radio Detection of an Elusive Millisecond Pulsar in the Globular Cluster NGC 6397” by Lei Zhang, Alessandro Ridolfi, Harsha Blumer, Paulo C. C. Freire, Richard N. Manchester, Maura McLaughlin, Kyle Kremer, Andrew D. Cameron, Zhiyu Zhang, Jan Behrend, Marta Burgay, Sarah Buchner, David J. Champion, Weiwei Chen, Shi Dai, Yi Feng, Xiaoting Fu, Meng Guo, George Hobbs, Evan F. Keane, Michael Kramer, Lina Levin, Xiangdong Li, Mengmeng Ni, Jingshan Pan, Prajwal V. Padmanabh, Andrea Possenti, Scott M. Ransom, Chao-Wei Tsai, Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, Pei Wang, Jie Zhang, Qijun Zhi, Yongkun Zhang and Di Li, 28 July 2022, The Astrophysical Journal Letters.DOI: 10.3847/ 2041-8213/ ac81c3.