A spider timing model: accounting for quadrupole deformations and relativity in close pulsar binaries
Guillaume Voisin (LUTH), Ren\'e Breton, Charlotte Summers

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive timing model for spider millisecond pulsars that incorporates relativistic effects and quadrupole deformations, enabling better understanding of their orbital dynamics and internal structures.
Contribution
It introduces a novel timing model accounting for relativistic corrections and quadrupole distortions, improving the analysis of orbital variations in spider pulsar systems.
Findings
Quadrupole deformation causes a minimum orbital eccentricity.
Fast periastron precession affects eccentricity measurements.
Model enables potential measurement of internal stellar structure.
Abstract
Spider millisecond pulsars are, along with some eclipsing post-common envelope systems and cataclysmic variables, part of an expanding category of compact binaries with low-mass companions for which puzzling timing anomalies have been observed. The most prominent type of irregularities seen in them are orbital period variations, a phenomenon which has been proposed to originate from changes in the gravitational quadrupole moment of the companion star. A physically sound modelling of the timing of these systems is key to understanding their structure and evolution. In this paper we argue that a complete timing model must account for relativistic corrections as well as rotationally and tidally induced quadrupole distortions. We solve for the resulting orbital dynamics using perturbation theory and derive the corresponding timing model in the low eccentricity limit. We find that the…
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