The millisecond pulsar mass distribution: Evidence for bimodality and constraints on the maximum neutron star mass
John Antoniadis, Thomas M. Tauris, Feryal Ozel, Ewan Barr, David J., Champion, Paulo C. C. Freire

TL;DR
This study analyzes millisecond pulsar mass data using Bayesian methods, revealing a bimodal distribution with implications for neutron star formation, and constrains the maximum neutron star mass to at least 2.018 solar masses.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian analysis showing the MSP mass distribution is bimodal and provides new constraints on the maximum neutron star mass.
Findings
MSP mass distribution is bimodal with distinct low and high mass components.
Maximum neutron star mass is constrained to be at least 2.018 solar masses.
Future surveys could measure the maximum mass with 5% precision.
Abstract
The mass function of neutron stars (NSs) contains information about the late evolution of massive stars, the supernova explosion mechanism, and the equation-of-state of cold, nuclear matter beyond the nuclear saturation density. A number of recent NS mass measurements in binary millisecond pulsar (MSP) systems increase the fraction of massive NSs (with M) to of the observed population. In light of these results, we employ a Bayesian framework to revisit the MSP mass distribution. We find that a single Gaussian model does not sufficiently describe the observed population. We test alternative empirical models and infer that the MSP mass distribution is strongly asymmetric. The diversity in spin and orbital properties of high-mass NSs suggests that this is most likely not a result of the recycling process, but rather reflects differences in the NS birth…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
