A multi-wavelength study of nearby millisecond pulsar PSR J1400$-$1431: improved astrometry & an optical detection of its cool white dwarf companion
Joseph K. Swiggum, David L. Kaplan, Maura A. McLaughlin, Duncan R., Lorimer, Slavko Bogdanov, Paul S. Ray, Ryan Lynch, Peter Gentile, Rachel, Rosen, Sue Ann Heatherly, Brad N. Barlow, Ryan J. Hegedus, Alan Vasquez Soto,, Paddy Clancy, Vladislav I. Kondratiev, Kevin Stovall

TL;DR
This study provides an improved astrometric solution for the nearby millisecond pulsar PSR J1400-1431, detects its cool white dwarf companion optically, and explores its multi-wavelength emission, revealing it as the least X-ray luminous MSP known.
Contribution
The paper presents the first optical detection of the pulsar's white dwarf companion and refines its distance and position, enhancing understanding of its properties and environment.
Findings
Distance estimated at approximately 270 pc with uncertainties.
Detection of a cool DA-type white dwarf companion.
PSR J1400-1431 is the least X-ray luminous rotation-powered MSP.
Abstract
In 2012, five high school students involved in the Pulsar Search Collaboratory discovered the millisecond pulsar PSR J14001431 and initial timing parameters were published in Rosen et al. (2013) a year later. Since then, we have obtained a phase-connected timing solution spanning five years, resolving a significant position discrepancy and measuring , proper motion, parallax, and a monotonic slope in dispersion measure over time. Due to PSR J14001431's proximity and significant proper motion, we use the Shklovskii effect and other priors to determine a 95% confidence interval for PSR J14001431's distance, pc. With an improved timing position, we present the first detection of the pulsar's low-mass white dwarf (WD) companion using the Goodman Spectrograph on the 4.1-m SOAR telescope. Deeper imaging suggests that it is a cool DA-type WD with $T_{\rm…
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