A PARALLAX DISTANCE AND MASS ESTIMATE FOR THE TRANSITIONAL MILLISECOND PULSAR SYSTEM J1023+0038

The recently discovered transitional millisecond pulsar system J1023+0038 exposes a crucial evolutionary phase of recycled neutron stars for multiwavelength study. The system, comprising the neutron star itself, its stellar companion, and the surrounding medium, is visible across the electromagnetic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astrophysical journal. Letters 2012-09, Vol.756 (2), p.1-5
Hauptverfasser: Deller, A T, Archibald, A M, Brisken, W F, Chatterjee, S, Janssen, G H, Raspi, V M, Lorimer, D, Lyne, A G, McLaughlin, M A, Ransom, S, Stairs, I H, Stappers, B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The recently discovered transitional millisecond pulsar system J1023+0038 exposes a crucial evolutionary phase of recycled neutron stars for multiwavelength study. The system, comprising the neutron star itself, its stellar companion, and the surrounding medium, is visible across the electromagnetic spectrum from the radio to X-ray/gamma-ray regimes and offers insight into the recycling phase of millisecond pulsar evolution. Here, we report on multiple-epoch astrometric observations with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) which give a system parallax of 0.731 + or - 0.022 milliarcseconds (mas) and a proper motion of 17.98 + or - 0.05 mas yr super(-1). By combining our results with previous optical observations, we are able to use the parallax distance of (ProQuest: Formulae and/or non-USASCII text omitted) pc to estimate the mass of the pulsar to be 1.71 + or - 0.16 M sub([middot in circle]), and we are also able to measure the three-dimensional space velocity of the system to be 126 + or - 5 km s super(-1). Despite the precise nature of the VLBA measurements, the remaining ~3% distance uncertainty dominates the 0.16 M sub([middot in circle]) error on our mass estimate.
ISSN:2041-8205
2041-8213
DOI:10.1088/2041-8205/756/2/L25