X-ray and optical observations of the millisecond pulsar binary PSRJ1431-4715
D. de Martino, A. Phosrisom, V.S. Dhillon, D.F. Torres, F. Coti, Zelati, R.P. Breton, T.R. Marsh, A. Miraval Zanon, N. Rea, A. Papitto

TL;DR
This study presents the first X-ray and optical observations of the millisecond pulsar binary PSR J1431-4715, revealing its non-thermal X-ray emission, system parameters, and the nature of its companion star, contributing new insights into redback systems.
Contribution
First combined X-ray and optical analysis of PSR J1431-4715, providing detailed system parameters and emission characteristics of this redback millisecond pulsar binary.
Findings
X-ray emission is non-thermal and lacks orbital modulation.
Optical light curve shows ellipsoidal effects and weak irradiation.
Companion is an underfilling F-type star with a mass of 0.20 M_sun.
Abstract
We present the first X-ray observation of the energetic millisecond pulsar binary PSR J1431-4715, performed with XMM-Newton and complemented with fast optical multi-band photometry acquired with the ULTRACAM instrument at ESO-NTT. It is found as a faint X-ray source without a significant orbital modulation. This contrasts with the majority of systems that instead display substantial X- ray orbital variability. The X-ray spectrum is dominated by non-thermal emission and, due to the lack of orbital modulation, does not favour an origin in an intrabinary shock between the pulsar and companion star wind. While thermal emission from the neutron star polar cap cannot be excluded in the soft X-rays, the dominance of synchrotron emission favours an origin in the pulsar magnetosphere that we describe at both X-ray and gamma-ray energies with a synchro-curvature model. The optical multi-colour…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
