Multi-Wavelength Observations Of A New Redback Millisecond Pulsar 4FGL J1910.7-5320
Ka-Yui Au, Jay Strader, Samuel J. Swihart, Lupin C. C. Lin, Albert K., H. Kong, Jumpei Takata, Chung-Yue Hui, Teresa Panurach, Isabella Molina,, Elias Aydi, Kirill Sokolovsky, and Kwan-Lok Li

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes a new redback millisecond pulsar binary through multi-wavelength observations, confirming its association with a Fermi gamma-ray source and providing insights into its optical, X-ray, and gamma-ray properties.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery and multi-wavelength characterization of a new redback millisecond pulsar, confirming its gamma-ray association and providing detailed spectral and orbital information.
Findings
Confirmed the redback pulsar nature through optical spectroscopy.
Identified X-ray counterpart with a hard spectrum and possible orbital variability.
Refined gamma-ray source position and established association with the pulsar.
Abstract
We present the study of multi-wavelength observations of an unidentified Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) source, 4FGL J1910.7-5320, a new candidate redback millisecond pulsar binary. In the 4FGL 95% error region of 4FGL J1910.7-5320, we find a possible binary with a 8.36-hr orbital period from the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey (CRTS), confirmed by optical spectroscopy using the SOAR telescope. This optical source was recently independently discovered as a redback pulsar by the TRAPUM project, confirming our prediction. We fit the optical spectral energy distributions of 4FGL J1910.7-5320 with a blackbody model, inferring a maximum distance of 4.1 kpc by assuming that the companion fills its Roche-lobe with a radius of R = 0.7R_sun. Using a 12.6 ks Chandra X-ray observation, we identified an X-ray counterpart for 4FGL J1910.7-5320, with a spectrum that can be described by an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
