PSR J1227$-$6208 and its massive white dwarf companion: pulsar emission analysis, timing update and mass measurements
Miquel Colom i Bernadich, Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, David J., Champion, Paulo C. C. Freire, Michael Kramer, Thomas M. Tauris, Matthew, Bailes, Alessandro Ridolfi, Maciej Serylak

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed timing and emission analysis of PSR J1227-6208, revealing its massive white dwarf companion, precise mass measurements, and system characteristics, contributing to understanding massive recycled pulsar-white dwarf systems.
Contribution
The study provides the first comprehensive timing analysis with over 11 years of data, including new MeerKAT observations, and constrains the masses and orbital parameters of the system.
Findings
Measured pulsar and companion masses with high precision.
Detected Shapiro delay and periastron advance, enabling mass constraints.
Classified the companion as a massive ONeMg white dwarf near Chandrasekhar limit.
Abstract
PSR J12276208 is a 34.53-ms recycled pulsar with a massive companion. This system has long been suspected to belong to the emerging class of massive recycled pulsar-ONeMg white dwarf systems such as PSR J22220137, PSR J15283146 and J14395501. Here we present an updated emission and timing analysis with more than 11 years of combined Parkes and MeerKAT data, including 19 hours of high-frequency data from the newly installed MeerKAT S-band receivers. We measure a scattering timescale of 1.22 ms at 1 GHz with a flat scattering index 3.33<<3.62, and a mean flux density of 0.53-0.62 mJy at 1 GHz with a steep spectral index 2.06<<2.35. Around 15% of the emission is linearly and circularly polarised, but the polarisation angle does not follow the rotating vector model. Thanks to the sensitivity of MeerKAT, we successfully measure a rate of periastron advance of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
