Investigating the origin of optical and X-ray pulsations of the transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038
G. Illiano, A. Papitto, F. Ambrosino, A. Miraval Zanon, F. Coti, Zelati, L. Stella, L. Zampieri, A. Burtovoi, S. Campana, P. Casella, M., Cecconi, D. de Martino, M. Fiori, A. Ghedina, M. Gonzales, M. Hernandez Diaz,, G. L. Israel, F. Leone, G. Naletto, H. Perez Ventura

TL;DR
This study analyzes simultaneous optical and X-ray observations of the transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038, revealing a consistent phase lag and supporting a shock-driven emission model for its pulsations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed timing analysis of optical and X-ray pulsations in PSR J1023+0038, confirming a common origin and supporting a shock-driven emission scenario.
Findings
Optical pulses lag X-ray pulses by ~150 microseconds.
Phase lag remains stable over five years.
Supports a shock-driven mini pulsar nebula model.
Abstract
PSR J1023+0038 is the first millisecond pulsar that was ever observed as an optical and UV pulsar. So far, it is the only optical transitional millisecond pulsar. The rotation- and accretion-powered emission mechanisms hardly individually explain the observed characteristics of optical pulsations. A synergistic model, combining these standard emission processes, was proposed to explain the origin of the X-ray/UV/optical pulsations. We study the phase lag between the pulses in the optical and X-ray bands to gain insight into the physical mechanisms that cause it. We performed a detailed timing analysis of simultaneous or quasi-simultaneous observations in the X-ray band, acquired with the XMM-Newton and NICER satellites, and in the optical band, with the fast photometers SiFAP2 (mounted at the 3.6 m Telescopio Nazionale Galileo) and Aqueye+ (mounted at the 1.8 m Copernicus Telescope). We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
