An Eclipsing Black Widow Pulsar in NGC 6712
Zhen Yan, Zhi-chen Pan, Scott M. Ransom, Duncan R. Lorimer, Lei Qian,, Pei Wang, Zhi-qiang Shen, Di Li, Peng Jiang, Jin-Tao Luo, Jie Liu, Zhi-peng, Huang

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the first radio pulsar in NGC 6712, an eclipsing black widow pulsar with unique orbital and emission properties, confirmed through extensive timing and observational data.
Contribution
It presents the first confirmed radio pulsar in NGC 6712, with detailed measurements of its orbit, spin-down rate, and eclipse characteristics, advancing understanding of black widow pulsars in globular clusters.
Findings
The pulsar has a 2.15 ms spin period and a 3.56 hr orbit.
The pulsar's association with NGC 6712 is supported by its position and spin-down rate.
Electron density in the eclipse region is estimated at 1.88×10^6 cm^-3.
Abstract
We report the discovery of the first radio pulsar associated with NGC 6712, an eclipsing black widow (BW) pulsar, J18530842A, found by high-sensitivity searches using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope. This 2.15 ms pulsar is in a 3.56 hr compact circular orbit with a very low mass companion likely of mass 0.018 to 0.036 and exhibits eclipsing of the pulsar signal. Though the distance to PSR J18530842A predicted from its dispersion measure ( cm pc) and Galactic free electron density models are about 30\% smaller than that of NGC 6712 obtained from interstellar reddening measurements, this is likely due to limited knowledge about the spiral arms and Scutum stellar cloud in this direction. Follow-up timing observations spanning 445 days allow us to localize the pulsar's position to be 0.14 core radii from the center of…
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