An eccentric binary millisecond pulsar with a helium white dwarf companion in the Galactic Field
John Antoniadis, David L. Kaplan, Kevin Stovall, Paulo C. C. Freire,, Julia S. Deneva, Detlev Koester, Fredrick Jenet, Jose G. Martinez

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an eccentric low-mass white dwarf in a binary with a millisecond pulsar, challenging existing binary evolution models and suggesting alternative formation scenarios involving circumbinary disks.
Contribution
It provides the first confirmed case of an eccentric LMWD with a pulsar, with detailed measurements and analysis that challenge previous theories of binary evolution.
Findings
The white dwarf has a temperature of 8600 K.
The system's properties favor a circumbinary disk interaction scenario.
Tentative pulsation evidence could open new avenues for white dwarf physics.
Abstract
Low-mass white dwarfs (LMWDs) are believed to be exclusive products of binary evolution, as the Universe is not yet old enough to produce them from single stars. Because of the strong tidal forces operating during the binary interaction phase, the remnant host systems observed today are expected to have negligible eccentricities. Here, we report on the first unambiguous identification of a LMWD in an eccentric (e=0.13) orbit with a millisecond pulsar, which directly contradicts this picture. We use our spectra and radio-timing solution (derived elsewhere) to infer the WD temperature T_eff = 8600 +/- 190 K) and 3D systemic velocity (179.5 km\s). We also place model-independent constraints on the WD radius (R_WD = 0.024+/- 0.004/0.002 R_sun) and surface gravity (log g = 7.11 +/- 0.08/0.16 dex). The WD and kinematic properties are consistent with the expectations for low-mass X-ray binary…
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