2FGL J0846.0+2820: A new neutron star binary with a giant secondary and variable $\gamma$-ray emission
Samuel J. Swihart, Jay Strader, Tyrel J. Johnson, C. C. Cheung, David, Sand, Laura Chomiuk, Asher Wasserman, S{\o}ren Larsen, Jean P. Brodie,, Gregory V. Simonian, Evangelia Tremou, Laura Shishkovsky, Daniel E. Reichart,, Joshua Haislip

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a new neutron star binary system with a giant secondary star and variable gamma-ray emission, suggesting a new subclass of millisecond pulsar progenitors.
Contribution
The study identifies a unique neutron star binary with a giant secondary and variable gamma-ray emission, expanding the known diversity of millisecond pulsar progenitors.
Findings
Heavy neutron star primary of ~2 solar masses
Giant secondary star of ~0.8 solar masses
Gamma-ray flux dropped significantly in 2009
Abstract
We present optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the likely stellar counterpart to the unassociated \emph{Fermi}-Large Area Telescope (LAT) -ray source 2FGL J0846.0+2820, selected for study based on positional coincidences of optical variables with unassociated LAT sources. Using optical spectroscopy from the SOAR telescope, we have identified a late-G giant in an eccentric ( = 0.06) 8.133 day orbit with an invisible primary. Modeling the spectroscopy and photometry together lead us to infer a heavy neutron star primary of and a partially stripped giant secondary of . H emission is observed in some of the spectra, perhaps consistent with the presence of a faint accretion disk. We find the -ray flux of 2FGL J0846.0+2820 dropped substantially in mid-2009, accompanied by an increased variation in the optical…
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