The geometric distance and binary orbit of PSR B1259-63
James C. A. Miller-Jones (1), Adam T. Deller (2), Ryan M. Shannon (2),, Richard Dodson (3), Javier Mold\'on (4), Marc Rib\'o (5), Guillaume Dubus, (6), Simon Johnston (7), Josep M. Paredes (5), Scott M. Ransom (8), John A., Tomsick (9) ((1) ICRAR - Curtin

TL;DR
This study used long baseline interferometry to precisely measure the distance, orbit orientation, and other parameters of the PSR B1259-63 binary system, providing new insights into its physical properties and origin.
Contribution
The paper presents the first full determination of all seven orbital elements of PSR B1259-63 using VLBI measurements combined with pulsar timing data.
Findings
Distance of 2.6 kpc with Bayesian inference
Orbit viewed at 154 degrees inclination, moving clockwise
System likely originated in Cen OB1 with a modest natal kick
Abstract
The pulsar/massive star binary system PSR B1259-63 / LS 2883 is one of the best-studied gamma-ray binaries, a class of systems whose bright gamma-ray flaring can provide important insights into high-energy physics. Using the Australian Long Baseline Array we have conducted very long baseline interferometric observations of PSR B1259-63 over 4.4 years, fully sampling the 3.4-year orbital period. From our measured parallax of mas we use a Bayesian approach to infer a distance of kpc. We find that the binary orbit is viewed at an angle of degrees to the line of sight, implying that the pulsar moves clockwise around its orbit as viewed on the sky. Taking our findings together with previous results from pulsar timing observations, all seven orbital elements for the system are now fully determined. We use our measurement of the inclination angle to…
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