VLBI astrometry of PSR J2222-0137: a pulsar distance measured to 0.4% accuracy
A. T. Deller, J. Boyles, D. R. Lorimer, V. M. Kaspi, M. A. McLaughlin,, S. Ransom, I. H. Stairs, K. Stovall

TL;DR
This paper presents a highly precise VLBI astrometric measurement of the pulsar J2222-0137, determining its distance to 0.4% accuracy, enabling improved system parameter estimates and implications for optical detection and pulsar timing arrays.
Contribution
It provides the most accurate pulsar distance via VLBI astrometry and demonstrates the potential for ultra-high-precision measurements at low radio frequencies.
Findings
Parallax measured to 0.4% accuracy, distance of 267.3 pc.
System nearly edge-on with sin i = 0.9985.
Orbital motion and longitude of ascending node detected.
Abstract
The binary pulsar J2222-0137 is an enigmatic system containing a partially recycled millisecond pulsar and a companion of unknown nature. Whilst the low eccentricity of the system favors a white dwarf companion, an unusual double neutron star system is also a possibility, and optical observations will be able to distinguish between these possibilities. In order to allow the absolute luminosity (or upper limit) of the companion object to be properly calibrated, we undertook astrometric observations with the Very Long Baseline Array to constrain the system distance via a measurement of annual geometric parallax. With these observations, we measure the parallax of the J2222-0137 system to be 3.742 +0.013 -0.016 milliarcseconds, yielding a distance of 267.3 +1.2 -0.9 pc, and measure the transverse velocity to be 57.1 +0.3 -0.2 km/s. Fixing these parameters in the pulsar timing model made it…
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