LOFAR discovery of the fastest-spinning millisecond pulsar in the Galactic field
C.G. Bassa, Z. Pleunis, J.W.T. Hessels, E.C. Ferrara, R.P. Breton,, N.V. Gusinskaia, V.I. Kondratiev, S. Sanidas, L. Nieder, C.J. Clark, T. Li,, A.S. van Amesfoort, T.H. Burnett, F. Camilo, P.F. Michelson, S.M. Ransom,, P.S. Ray, K. Wood

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of PSR J0952-0607, the fastest-spinning millisecond pulsar in the Galactic field, found using LOFAR at 135 MHz, with unique properties including a steep radio spectrum and a black widow binary system.
Contribution
First detection of a 707-Hz millisecond pulsar in the Galactic field using low-frequency LOFAR surveys, expanding knowledge of ultra-fast pulsars and their spectral characteristics.
Findings
Fastest-spinning neutron star in the Galactic field at 707 Hz.
Pulsar has an extremely steep radio spectrum with α ≈ -3.
System classified as a black widow binary with a low-mass companion.
Abstract
We report the discovery of PSR J09520607, a 707-Hz binary millisecond pulsar which is now the fastest-spinning neutron star known in the Galactic field (i.e., outside of a globular cluster). PSR J09520607 was found using LOFAR at a central observing frequency of 135 MHz, well below the 300 MHz to 3 GHz frequencies typically used in pulsar searches. The discovery is part of an ongoing LOFAR survey targeting unassociated Fermi Large Area Telescope -ray sources. PSR J09520607 is in a 6.42-hr orbit around a very low-mass companion ( M) and we identify a strongly variable optical source, modulated at the orbital period of the pulsar, as the binary companion. The light curve of the companion varies by 1.6 mag from at maximum to , indicating that it is irradiated by the pulsar wind. Swift observations place a…
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