The MPIfR-MeerKAT Galactic Plane Survey II. The eccentric double neutron star system PSR J1208-5936 and a neutron star merger rate update
M. Colom i Bernadich, V. Balakrishnan, E. Barr, M. Berezina, M., Burgay, S. Buchner, D. J. Champion, W. Chen, G. Desvignes, P. C. C. Freire,, K. Grunthal, M. Kramer, Y. Men, P. V. Padmanabh, A. Parthasarathy, D. Pillay,, I. Rammala, S. Sengupta, and V. Venkatraman Krishnan

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed timing analysis of a new eccentric double neutron star system, PSR J1208-5936, and updates the Galactic neutron star merger rate, with implications for gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed timing of PSR J1208-5936, measures relativistic effects, and refines the Galactic neutron star merger rate using the MMGPS-L survey data.
Findings
Measured relativistic periastron advance of 0.918 deg/yr.
Updated the Milky Way neutron star merger rate to 25 Myr$^{-1}$.
Predicted 10 neutron star merger detections during LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA O4.
Abstract
The MMGPS-L is the most sensitive pulsar survey in the Southern Hemisphere. We present a follow-up study of one of these new discoveries, PSR J1208-5936, a 28.71-ms recycled pulsar in a double neutron star system with an orbital period of Pb=0.632 days and an eccentricity of e=0.348. Through timing of almost one year of observations, we detected the relativistic advance of periastron (0.918(1) deg/yr), resulting in a total system mass of Mt=2.586(5) Mo. We also achieved low-significance constraints on the amplitude of the Einstein delay and Shapiro delay, in turn yielding constraints on the pulsar mass (Mp=1.26(+0.13/-0.25) Mo), the companion mass (Mc=1.32(+0.25/-0.13) Mo, and the inclination angle (i=57(12) degrees). This system is highly eccentric compared to other Galactic field double neutron stars with similar periods, possibly hinting at a larger-than-usual supernova kick during…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · GNSS positioning and interference
