Infrared observations of the candidate double neutron star system PSR J1811-1736
R. P. Mignani (MSS-UCL, Kepler Institute of Astronomy, University of, Zielona Gora), A. Corongiu (INAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Cagliari), C., Pallanca, F. R. Ferraro (Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, Universita', degli Studi di Bologna)

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential infrared counterpart of the binary pulsar PSR J1811-1736 to determine if its companion is a neutron star or a different stellar object, using deep IR observations and statistical analysis.
Contribution
First infrared search for the companion of PSR J1811-1736, providing constraints on its nature and assessing the likelihood of a neutron star companion versus a stellar one.
Findings
Detected a possible IR companion star within the radio position uncertainty.
The candidate star's colors are consistent with a main sequence or red giant star at ~5.5 kpc.
The probability of a chance coincidence with the pulsar is high (~0.27).
Abstract
PSR J1811-1736 (P=104 ms) is an old (~1.89 Gyrs) binary pulsar (P_orb=18.8 d) in a highly eccentric orbit (e=0.828) with an unidentified companion. Interestingly enough, the pulsar timing solution yields an estimated companion mass 0.93 M_{\odot}<M_C<1.5 M_{\odot}, compatible with that of a neutron star. As such, it is possible that PSR J1811-1736 is a double neutron star (DNS) system, one of the very few discovered so far. This scenario can be investigated through deep optical/infrared (IR) observations. We used J, H, K-band images, obtained as part of the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS), and available in the recent Data Release 9 Plus, to search for its undetected companion of the PSR J1811-1736 binary pulsar. We detected a possible companion star to PSR J1811-1736 within the 3 sigma radio position uncertainty (1.32 arcsec), with magnitudes…
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