Triple trouble with PSR J1618-3921: Mass measurements and orbital dynamics of an eccentric millisecond pulsar
K. Grunthal, V. Venkatraman Krishnan, P. C. C. Freire, M. Kramer, M., Bailes, S. Buchner, M. Burgay, A. D. Cameron, C.-H.R. Chen, I. Cognard, L., Guillemot, M. E. Lower, A. Possenti, and G. Theureau

TL;DR
This study presents detailed mass and orbital dynamics measurements of the eccentric millisecond pulsar PSR J1618-3921, revealing potential evidence of a hierarchical triple system and challenging existing binary evolution models.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive 23-year dataset analysis of PSR J1618-3921, including new mass estimates and evidence for a possible triple star system formation scenario.
Findings
Mass measurements suggest a binary companion consistent with white dwarf predictions.
Detected orbital period change larger than expected, indicating additional acceleration.
Observed abrupt pulse profile change with unknown cause.
Abstract
PSR J1618-3921 is one of five known millisecond pulsars (MSPs) in eccentric orbits (eMPSs) located in the Galactic plane, whose formation is poorly understood. Earlier studies of these objects revealed significant discrepancies between observation and predictions from standard binary evolution scenarios of pulsar-Helium white dwarf binaries. We conducted observations with the L-band receiver of the MeerKAT radio telescope and the UWL receiver of the Parkes Murriyang radio telescope between 2019 and 2021. These data were added to archival observations. We perform an analysis of this joint 23-year-dataset. We use the recent observations to give a brief account of the emission properties of J1618-3921, including a Rotating Vector model fit of the linear polarisation position angle of the pulsar. The long timing baseline allowed for a highly significant measurement of the rate of advance of…
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