LMXB and IMXB Evolution: I. The Binary Radio Pulsar PSR J1614-2230
Jinrong Lin, S. Rappaport, Ph. Podsiadlowski, L. Nelson, B. Paxton,, and P. Todorov

TL;DR
This study uses extensive binary evolution modeling with the MESA code to understand the formation of the massive pulsar PSR J1614-2230, revealing the initial conditions needed and the evolutionary pathways involved.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive grid of binary evolution models for low- and intermediate-mass X-ray binaries, applying these to explain the properties of PSR J1614-2230 and similar systems.
Findings
Initial donor mass for PSR J1614-2230 progenitor is 3.4-3.8 solar masses.
A minimum initial neutron star mass of 1.6 solar masses is required.
The companion star is largely CO with a surface H abundance of 10-15%.
Abstract
We have computed an extensive grid of binary evolution tracks to represent low- and intermediate mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs and IMXBs). The grid includes 42,000 models which covers 60 initial donor masses over the range of 1-4 solar masses and, for each of these, 700 initial orbital periods over the range of 10-250 hours. These results can be applied to understanding LMXBs and IMXBs: those that evolve analogously to CVs; that form ultracompact binaries with orbital periods in the range of 6-50 minutes; and that lead to wide orbits with giant donors. We also investigate the relic binary recycled radio pulsars into which these systems evolve. To evolve the donor stars in this study, we utilized a newly developed stellar evolution code called "MESA" that was designed, among other things, to be able to handle very low-mass and degenerate donors. This first application of the results is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
