X-Ray Observations of Black Widow Pulsars
P. Gentile, M. Roberts, M. McLaughlin, F. Camilo, J. Hessels, M. Kerr,, S. Ransom, P. Ray, I. Stairs

TL;DR
This study presents the first X-ray observations of five short-orbit, gamma-ray emitting binary millisecond pulsars, revealing orbital variability and intrabinary shock emission signatures, with spectral analysis supporting shock-related X-ray production.
Contribution
First X-ray observational analysis of five short-orbit gamma-ray binary millisecond pulsars, identifying orbital variability and intrabinary shock emission evidence.
Findings
Orbital variability observed in three pulsars, with X-ray minima during radio eclipses.
Spectral fits indicate power-law and blackbody components, with some pulsars showing significant hard X-ray emission.
Evidence of intrabinary shock emission consistent with previous observations of similar systems.
Abstract
We describe the first X-ray observations of five short orbital period ( day), -ray emitting, binary millisecond pulsars. Four of these, PSRs J0023+0923, J11243653, J1810+1744, and J22561024 are `black-widow' pulsars, with degenerate companions of mass , three of which exhibit radio eclipses. The fifth source, PSR J2215+5135, is an eclipsing `redback' with a near Roche-lobe filling 0.2 solar mass non-degenerate companion. Data were taken using the \textit{Chandra X-Ray Observatory} and covered a full binary orbit for each pulsar. Two pulsars, PSRs J2215+5135 and J22561024, show significant orbital variability while PSR J11243653 shows marginal orbital variability. The lightcurves for these three pulsars have X-ray flux minima coinciding with the phases of the radio eclipses. This phenomenon is consistent with an intrabinary shock…
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