The relativistic pulsar-white dwarf binary PSR J1738+0333 I. Mass determination and evolutionary history
J. Antoniadis, M. H. van Kerkwijk, D. Koester, P. C. C. Freire, N., Wex, T. M. Tauris, M. Kramer, C. G. Bassa

TL;DR
This paper determines the masses of the pulsar and white dwarf in PSR J1738+0333, providing insights into their evolution and testing general relativity through orbital decay measurements.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed spectroscopic and photometric analysis of the white dwarf companion, accurately constraining the neutron star's mass and the system's evolutionary history.
Findings
White dwarf mass: 0.181 solar masses
Neutron star mass: 1.47 solar masses
Orbital decay consistent with general relativity
Abstract
PSR J1738+0333 is one of the four millisecond pulsars known to be orbited by a white dwarf companion bright enough for optical spectroscopy. Of these, it has the shortest orbital period, making it especially interesting for a range of astrophysical and gravity related questions. We present a spectroscopic and photometric study of the white dwarf companion and infer its radial velocity curve, effective temperature, surface gravity and luminosity. We find that the white dwarf has properties consistent with those of low-mass white dwarfs with thick hydrogen envelopes, and use the corresponding mass-radius relation to infer its mass; M_WD = 0.181 +/- +0.007/-0.005 solar masses. Combined with the mass ratio q=8.1 +/- 0.2 inferred from the radial velocities and the precise pulsar timing ephemeris, the neutron star mass is constrained to M_PSR = 1.47 +/- +0.07/-0.06 solar masses. Contrary to…
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