PSR J0952–0607

PSR J0952–0607 is a massive millisecond pulsar in a binary system, located between 3,200–5,700 light-years (970–1,740 pc) away from Earth in the constellation Sextans.[5] It holds the record for being the most massive neutron star known as of 2022, with a mass 2.35±0.17 times as much as the Sun—potentially close to the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff mass upper limit for neutron stars.[4][6] The pulsar rotates at a frequency of 707 Hz (1.41 ms period), making it the second-fastest-spinning pulsar known, and the fastest-spinning pulsar that is located in the Milky Way.[7][5]

PSR J0952–0607

PSR J0952–0607 (center crosshair) imaged by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0      Equinox J2000.0
Constellation Sextans
Right ascension 09h 52m 08.319s[1]
Declination −06° 07 23.49[1]
Characteristics
Spectral type Pulsar
Apparent magnitude (i) 22.0–24.4[2]
Astrometry
Distance970+1160
−530
 pc
[3]
or 1740+1570
−820
 pc
[3]
or 6260+360
−400
(optical) pc[4]
Details
PSR J0952–0607 A
Mass2.35±0.17[4] M
Rotation1.41379836 ms[3]
Age4.9[3] Gyr
PSR J0952–0607 B
Mass0.032±0.002[4] M
Luminosity9.96+1.20
−1.12
[lower-alpha 1] L
Temperature3085+85
−80
[4] K
Metallicity [Fe/H]–0.5[2] dex
Orbit[3]
PrimaryPSR J0952–0607 A
CompanionPSR J0952–0607 B
Period (P)0.267461035 d
(6.41906484 h)
Semi-major axis (a)1600000 km[lower-alpha 2]
Eccentricity (e)<0.004
Inclination (i)59.8+2.0
−1.9
[4]°
Semi-amplitude (K2)
(secondary)
376.1±5.1[4] km/s
Other designations
PSR J0952–0607, 4FGL J0952.1–0607
Database references
SIMBADdata

PSR J0952–0607 was discovered by the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope during a search for pulsars in 2016.[5] It is classified as a black widow pulsar, a type of pulsar harboring a closely-orbiting substellar-mass companion that is being ablated by the pulsar's intense high-energy solar winds and gamma-ray emissions.[4][8] The pulsar's high-energy emissions have been detected in gamma-ray and X-ray wavelengths.[9][3][10]

Discovery

PSR J0952–0607 was first identified as an unassociated gamma-ray source detected during the first seven years of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope's all-sky survey since 2008.[7]:2 Because of its optimal location away from the crowded Galactic Center and its pulsar-like[11]:8 gamma-ray emission peak at 1.4 GeV, it was deemed a prime millisecond pulsar candidate for follow-up.[7]:2 The pulsar was reobserved and confirmed by the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope in the Netherlands on 25 December 2016, which revealed a 707-Hz radio pulsation frequency alongside radial acceleration by an unseen binary companion.[7]:3 Further LOFAR observations took place from January to February 2017, alongside radio observations by the Green Bank Telescope in Green Bank, West Virginia in March 2017.[7]:3 Optical observations by the 2.54-meter Isaac Newton Telescope on La Palma detected and confirmed the pulsar's companion at a faint apparent magnitude of 23 in January 2017.[7]:3 The discovery was published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters and was announced in a NASA press release in September 2017.[7][5]

Distance and location

The distance of PSR J0952–0607 from Earth is highly uncertain.[2][3][4]

Binary system

The PSR J0952–0607 binary system comprises a massive pulsar and a substellar-mass (<0.1 M)[8]:127 companion in close orbit around it.[4] Because of this configuration, this system falls under the category of black widow pulsars that "consume" their companion, by analogy with the mating behavior of the eponymous black widow spider.[6] The companion is continuously losing mass through ablation by intense high-energy solar winds and gamma-ray emissions from the pulsar, which then accretes some of the companion's lost material onto itself.[8]:127[4]:1

Companion

Artist's impression of a black widow pulsar system, where a stellar-mass companion is being ablated by the intense radiation of its host pulsar

The companion orbits the pulsar at a distance of 1.6 million km (1 million mi)[lower-alpha 2] with an orbital period of 6.42 hours.[4] Because it orbits so closely, the companion is presumably tidally locked, with one hemisphere always facing the pulsar.[3]:8 The companion does not appear to eclipse the pulsar,[7]:1[3]:12 indicating that its orbit is oriented nearly face-on with an inclination of 60° with respect to the plane perpendicular to Earth's line of sight.[4]:4 The companion's orbital motion also does not appear to modulate the pulsar's pulsations, signifying a circular orbit with negligible orbital eccentricity.[3]:4

The companion was likely a former star that had been reduced to the size of a large gas giant planet or brown dwarf,[6][3]:12 with a present-day mass of 0.032±0.002 M or 34±2 MJ according to radial velocity measurements.[4]:4 Due to intense irradiation and heating by the host pulsar, the companion's radius is bloated up to 80% of its Roche lobe[3]:8[4]:4 and brightly glows with a thermal luminosity of about 10 L,[lower-alpha 1] thereby accounting for much of the system's optical brightness.[4]:1,4[2]:1 As a result of bloating, the companion attains a low density likely around 10 g/cm3 (with significant uncertainty due to the system's unknown distance from Earth),[2]:11 making it susceptible to tidal deformation by the pulsar.[3]:12

The companion's pulsar-facing irradiated hemisphere is continuously heated up to a temperature of 6,200 K, whereas the companion's unirradiated hemisphere experiences a uniform[2]:4 temperature of 3,000 K.[4]:4 This hemispherical temperature difference corresponds to a difference in hemisphere luminosities, which in turn causes significant variability in apparent brightness as the companion rotates around the pulsar.[7]:4[3]:8 This brightness variability is demonstrated in PSR J0952–0607's optical light curve, which exhibits an amplitude greater than one magnitude.[2]:4

Mass

PSR J0952–0607 has a mass of 2.35±0.17 M, making it the most massive neutron star known as of 2022.[4] The pulsar likely acquired most of its mass by accreting up to 1 M of lost material from its companion.[4]:5

Rotation and age

PSR J0952–0607 rotates at a frequency of 707 Hz (1.41 ms period), making it the second-fastest-spinning pulsar known, and the fastest-spinning pulsar that is located in the Milky Way.[7][5] Assuming a standard neutron star radius of 10 km (6.2 mi),[3]:11 the equator of PSR J0952–0607 rotates at a tangential velocity over 44,400 km/s (27,600 mi/s)—about 14% the speed of light.[12] Based on 7 years of precise pulsation timing data from gamma-ray and radio observations, the pulsar's rotation period is estimated to be slowing down at a spin-down rate less than 4.6×10−21 seconds per second, corresponding to a characteristic age of 4.9 billion years.[3]:11

Magnetic field

Measurements of PSR J0952–0607's spin-down rate show that the pulsar has a remarkably weak surface magnetic field strength of 6.1×107 gauss (6.1×103 T), placing it among the 10 weakest pulsar magnetic fields known as of 2022.[4]:1 For context, ordinary pulsar magnetic fields usually lie on the order of teragauss (1×1012 G, 1.0×108 T), over 10,000 times greater than that of PSR J0952–0607.[13][4]:1 Other millisecond pulsars exhibit similarly weak magnetic fields, hinting at a common albeit unknown mechanism in these types of systems;[3]:2 possible explanations range from accreted matter burying the pulsar's surface magnetic field to heat-driven evolution of the pulsar's solid crust.[13]:1–2[4]:1

Gamma-ray emissions

PSR J0952–0607 appears very faint in gamma-rays and was not detected in July 2011.[10][3]:2

See also

Notes

  1. Luminosity converted from erg/s to L, given 3.81+0.46
    −0.43
    ×1034 erg/s
    from Romani et al. (2022)[4] and the solar luminosity L = 3.826×1033 erg/s.
  2. Orbital semi-major axis calculated with Kepler's Third Law: given primary mass = 2.35 M and orbital period = 6.42 h.[4] Nieder et al. (2019) determined a minimum projected semi-major axis of 0.0626670 light seconds (18787 km) from gamma-ray and radio pulsation timing.[3]:6

References

  1. "PSR J0952-0607 -- Pulsar". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  2. Draghis, Paul; Romani, Roger W.; Filippenko, Alexei V.; Brink, Thomas G.; Zheng, WeiKang; Halpern, Jules P.; Fernando, Camilo (September 2019). "Multiband Optical Light Curves of Black-widow Pulsars". The Astrophysical Journal. 883 (1): 13. arXiv:1908.00992. Bibcode:2019ApJ...883..108D. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab378b. 108.
  3. Nieder, L.; Clark, C. J.; Bassa, C. G.; Wu, J.; Singh, A.; Donner, J. Y.; et al. (September 2019). "Detection and Timing of Gamma-Ray Pulsations from the 707 Hz Pulsar J0952-0607". The Astrophysical Journal. 883 (1): 17. arXiv:1905.11352. Bibcode:2019ApJ...883...42N. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab357e. 42.
  4. Romani, Roger W.; Kandel, D.; Filippenko, Alexei V.; Brink, Thomas G.; Zheng, WeiKang (August 2022). "PSR J0952-0607: The Fastest and Heaviest Known Galactic Neutron Star". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 934 (2): 6. arXiv:2207.05124. Bibcode:2022ApJ...934L..17R. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ac8007. L18.
  5. Reddy, Francis (5 September 2017). "'Extreme' Telescopes Find the Second-fastest-spinning Pulsar". NASA. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  6. Sanders, Robert (26 July 2022). "Heaviest neutron star to date is a 'black widow' eating its mate". Berkeley News. University of California Berkeley. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  7. Bassa, C. G.; Pleunis, Z.; Hessels, J. W. T.; Ferrara, E. C.; Breton, R. P.; Gusinskaia, N. V.; et al. (September 2017). "LOFAR Discovery of the Fastest-spinning Millisecond Pulsar in the Galactic Field". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 846 (2): 7. arXiv:1709.01453. Bibcode:2017ApJ...846L..20B. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/aa8400. L20.
  8. Roberts, Mallory S. E. (March 2013). "Surrounded by spiders! New black widows and redbacks in the Galactic field". Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union. 291: 127–132. arXiv:1210.6903. Bibcode:2013IAUS..291..127R. doi:10.1017/S174392131202337X.
  9. Ho, Wynn C. G.; Heinke, Craig O.; Chugunov, Andrey I. (September 2019). "XMM-Newton Detection and Spectrum of the Second Fastest Spinning Pulsar PSR J0952-0607". The Astrophysical Journal. 882 (2): 7. arXiv:1905.12001. Bibcode:2019ApJ...882..128H. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab3578. 128.
  10. Kohler, Susanna (11 December 2019). "An Extreme Pulsar Seen in Gamma Rays". AAS Nova Highlights. American Astronomical Society. Bibcode:2019nova.pres.6048K. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  11. Abdollahi, S.; Acero, F.; Ackermann, M.; Ajello, M.; Atwood, W. B.; Axelsson, M.; et al. (March 2020). "Fermi Large Area Telescope Fourth Source Catalog". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 247 (1): 37. arXiv:1902.10045. Bibcode:2020ApJS..247...33A. doi:10.3847/1538-4365/ab6bcb. 33.
  12. Starr, Michelle (24 September 2019). "Astronomers Detect Gamma Rays From an Extreme Pulsar Spinning 707 Times Per Second". ScienceAlert. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  13. Mukherjee, Dipanjan (September 2017). "Revisiting Field Burial by Accretion onto Neutron Stars". Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy. 38 (3): 10. arXiv:1709.07332. Bibcode:2017JApA...38...48M. doi:10.1007/s12036-017-9465-6. hdl:1885/247814. 48.
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