Missing for 20 years: MeerKAT re-detects the elusive binary pulsar M30B
Vishnu Balakrishnan, Paulo Freire, Scott Ransom, Alessandro Ridolfi,, Ewan Barr, Weiwei Chen, Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, David J. Champion,, Michael Kramer, Tasha Gautam, Prajwal Padmanabh, Yunpeng Men, Federico, Abbate, Benjamin Stappers, Ingrid Stairs, Evan Keane

TL;DR
This paper reports the re-detection and detailed orbital characterization of the elusive binary pulsar M30B in the globular cluster M30, using MeerKAT observations to measure its orbit, mass, and relativistic effects.
Contribution
First confirmation and localization of the 20-year elusive pulsar M30B, with new orbital parameters and mass estimates derived from MeerKAT data and relativistic effects.
Findings
Pulsar M30B has a highly eccentric orbit with e=0.879 and a 6.2-day period.
Total system mass estimated at 2.53 solar masses, consistent with a double neutron star system.
Mass estimates suggest a massive white dwarf or neutron star companion.
Abstract
PSR J21402311B is a 13-ms pulsar discovered in 2001 in a 7.8-hour Green Bank Telescope (GBT) observation of the core-collapsed globular cluster M30 and predicted to be in a highly eccentric binary orbit. This pulsar has eluded detection since then, therefore its precise orbital parameters have remained a mystery until now. In this work, we present the confirmation of this pulsar using observations taken with the UHF receivers of the MeerKAT telescope as part of the TRAPUM Large Survey Project. Taking advantage of the beamforming capability of our backends, we have localized it, placing it from the cluster centre. Our observations have enabled the determination of its orbit: it is highly eccentric () with an orbital period of days. We also measured the rate of periastron advance, . Assuming that this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Statistical and numerical algorithms
