Evidence of intra-binary shock emission from the redback pulsar PSR J1048+2339
A. Miraval Zanon, P. D'Avanzo, A. Ridolfi, F. Coti Zelati, S. Campana,, C. Tiburzi, D. de Martino, T. Mu\~noz Darias, C. G. Bassa, L. Zampieri, A., Possenti, F. Ambrosino, A. Papitto, M. C. Baglio, M. Burgay, A. Burtovoi, D., Michilli, P. Ochner, P. Zucca

TL;DR
This study provides multiwavelength observations of the redback pulsar PSR J1048+2339, revealing intra-binary shock emission, constraining system parameters, and finding no evidence of an accretion disk or pulsed radio signals, suggesting complex pulsar-companion interactions.
Contribution
First phase-resolved spectroscopy of PSR J1048+2339 constrains neutron star and companion masses and reveals intra-binary shock emission without evidence of an accretion disk.
Findings
Intra-binary shock emission detected near the companion star.
No evidence of an accretion disk in the system.
Radio observations show no pulsed signals, likely due to absorption.
Abstract
We present simultaneous multiwavelength observations of the 4.66 ms redback pulsar PSR J1048+2339. We performed phase-resolved spectroscopy with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) searching for signatures of a residual accretion disk or intra-binary shock emission, constraining the companion radial velocity semi-amplitude (), and estimating the neutron star mass (). Using the FORS2-VLT intermediate-resolution spectra, we measured a companion velocity of km s and a binary mass ratio of . Combining our results for and , we constrained the mass of the neutron star and the companion to and , respectively, where is the system inclination. The Doppler map of the H emission line exhibits a spot feature at the expected…
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