Constraining the Emission Geometry and Mass of the White Dwarf Pulsar AR Sco using the Rotating Vector Model
Louis du Plessis, Zorawar Wadiasingh, Christo Venter, and Alice K., Harding

TL;DR
This study applies the rotating vector model to optical polarization data of the white dwarf pulsar AR Sco, constraining its magnetic geometry and mass, and suggesting non-thermal emission originates from its magnetosphere.
Contribution
It is the first application of the rotating vector model to optical polarization data of a white dwarf pulsar, providing detailed geometric and mass constraints.
Findings
AR Sco is an orthogonal rotator with a 60° observer angle.
White dwarf mass estimated at approximately 1 solar mass.
Non-thermal emission likely from the dipolar magnetosphere via synchrotron radiation.
Abstract
We apply the standard radio pulsar rotating vector model to the white dwarf pulsar AR Sco's optical polarization position angle swings folded at the white dwarf's spin period as obtained by Buckley et al. (2017). Owing to the long duty cycle of spin pulsations with a good signal-to-noise ratio over the entire spin phase, in contrast to neutron star radio pulsars, we find well-constrained values for the magnetic obliquity and observer viewing direction with respect to the spin axis. We find and , implying an orthogonal rotator with an observer angle . This orthogonal nature of the rotator is consistent with the optical light curve consisting of two pulses per spin period, separated by in phase. Under the assumption that , where…
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