A Massive Neutron Star in the Globular Cluster M5
Paulo C. C. Freire, Alex Wolszczan, Maureen van den Berg, Jason W., T. Hessels

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of a massive neutron star in the globular cluster M5, with measurements suggesting it exceeds the typical neutron star mass, challenging existing equations of state.
Contribution
It provides precise mass measurements of a neutron star in M5, indicating a mass likely above 2 solar masses, which constrains dense matter equations of state.
Findings
Neutron star mass estimated at 2.08 solar masses
Orbital parameters measured via periastron advance
Implication that many millisecond pulsars are more massive than 1.44 solar masses
Abstract
We report the results of 19 years of Arecibo timing for two pulsars in the globular cluster NGC 5904 (M5), PSR B1516+02A (M5A) and PSR B1516+02B (M5B). This has resulted in the measurement of the proper motions of these pulsars and, by extension, that of the cluster itself. M5B is a 7.95-ms pulsar in a binary system with a > 0.13 solar mass companion and an orbital period of 6.86 days. In deep HST images, no optical counterpart is detected within ~2.5 sigma of the position of the pulsar, implying that the companion is either a white dwarf or a low-mass main-sequence star. The eccentricity of the orbit (e = 0.14) has allowed a measurement of the rate of advance of periastron: (0.0142 +/-0.0007) degrees per year. We argue that it is very likely that this periastron advance is due to the effects of general relativity, the total mass of the binary system then being 2.29 +/-0.17 solar…
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