Wide binary pulsars from electron-capture supernovae
Simon Stevenson, Reinhold Willcox, Alejandro Vigna-Gomez, Floor, Broekgaarden

TL;DR
This paper predicts a population of wide, low-mass binary pulsars formed via electron-capture supernovae with low natal kicks, estimates their occurrence rate, and discusses the prospects for future detection.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a new class of binary pulsars formed through electron-capture supernovae and estimates their expected frequency and observational signatures.
Findings
Estimated one such binary per 10,000 isolated pulsars.
No candidates found in current catalogs, consistent with low predicted rate.
Future SKA observations could detect this rare pulsar class.
Abstract
Neutron stars receive velocity kicks at birth in supernovae. Those formed in electron-capture supernovae from super asymptotic giant branch stars -- the lowest mass stars to end their lives in supernovae -- may receive significantly lower kicks than typical neutron stars. Given that many massive stars are members of wide binaries, this suggests the existence of a population of low-mass (M), wide (\,day), eccentric (), unrecycled (\,s) binary pulsars. The formation rate of such binaries is sensitive to the mass range of (effectively) single stars leading to electron capture supernovae, the amount of mass lost prior to the supernova, and the magnitude of any natal kick imparted on the neutron star. We estimate that one such binary pulsar should be observable in the Milky Way for…
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