A radio pulsing white dwarf binary star
T.R. Marsh, B.T. G\"ansicke, S. H\"ummerich, F.-J. Hambsch, K., Bernhard, C.Lloyd, E. Breedt, E.R. Stanway, D.T. Steeghs, S.G. Parsons, O., Toloza, M.R. Schreiber, P.G. Jonker, J. van Roestel, T. Kupfer, A.F. Pala,, V.S. Dhillon, L.K. Hardy, S.P. Littlefair, A. Aungwerojwit

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of AR Scorpii, a binary system with a white dwarf emitting pulsed radiation from X-ray to radio wavelengths, driven primarily by the white dwarf's spin-down energy and involving relativistic electrons.
Contribution
It is the first detection of radio pulsations from a white dwarf binary, revealing a spin-powered system with broad-spectrum synchrotron emission and complex star-magnetosphere interactions.
Findings
AR Sco exhibits 1.97-minute pulsations detectable across the electromagnetic spectrum.
The white dwarf's spin is slowing down over a 10^7-year timescale.
The system's emission is consistent with synchrotron radiation involving relativistic electrons.
Abstract
White dwarfs are compact stars, similar in size to Earth but ~200,000 times more massive. Isolated white dwarfs emit most of their power from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths, but when in close orbits with less dense stars, white dwarfs can strip material from their companions, and the resulting mass transfer can generate atomic line and X-ray emission, as well as near- and mid-infrared radiation if the white dwarf is magnetic. However, even in binaries, white dwarfs are rarely detected at far-infrared or radio frequencies. Here we report the discovery of a white dwarf / cool star binary that emits from X-ray to radio wavelengths. The star, AR Scorpii (henceforth AR Sco), was classified in the early 1970s as a delta-Scuti star, a common variety of periodic variable star. Our observations reveal instead a 3.56 hr period close binary, pulsing in brightness on a period of 1.97 min.…
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