Gemini optical observations of binary millisecond-pulsars
V. Testa (1), R. P. Mignani (2,3), C. Pallanca (4), A. Corongiu (5),, F. R. Ferraro (4) ((1) INAF-Astr.Obs. Rome, Italy, (2) INAF-IASF Milan, Italy, (3) Kepler Institute of Astronomy, University of Zielona Gora, Poland, (4), Dept. of Physics, Astronomy, University of Bologna

TL;DR
This study used archival Gemini South data to identify and characterize probable white dwarf companions to four binary millisecond pulsars, providing insights into their properties and evolutionary status.
Contribution
First optical identification of companion stars to three MSPs using archival Gemini data, with preliminary classification and parameter estimates.
Findings
Likely companion stars identified for three MSPs
Candidate companions are consistent with helium white dwarfs
Estimated ranges for mass, temperature, and gravity of companions
Abstract
Milli-second pulsars (MSPs) are rapidly spinning neutron stars, with spin periods P_s <= 10 ms, which have been most likely spun up after a phase of matter accretion from a companion star. In this work we present the results of the search for the companion stars of four binary milli-second pulsars, carried out with archival data from the Gemini South telescope. Based upon a very good positional coincidence with the pulsar radio coordinates, we likely identified the companion stars to three MSPs, namely PSRJ0614-3329 (g=21.95 +- 0.05), J1231-1411 (g=25.40 +-0.23), and J2017+0603 (g=24.72 +- 0.28). For the last pulsar (PSRJ0613-0200) the identification was hampered by the presence of a bright star (g=16 +- 0.03) at \sim 2" from the pulsar radio coordinates and we could only set 3-sigma upper limits of g=25.0, r= 24.3, and i= 24.2 on the magnitudes of its companion star. The candidate…
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.
