Evidence for optical pulsations from a redback millisecond pulsar
A. Papitto, F. Ambrosino, M. Burgay, R. La Placa, C. J. Clark, C. Ballocco, G. Illiano, C. Malacaria, A. Miraval Zanon, A. Possenti, L. Stella, A. Ghedina, M Cecconi, F. Leone, M. Gonzalez, H. Perez Ventura, M. Hernandez Diaz, J. San Juan, and H. Stoev

TL;DR
This study reports potential optical pulsations from the redback millisecond pulsar PSR J2339-0533, indicating that optical emission can occur independently of accretion disks and may be enhanced by them.
Contribution
First detection of optical pulsations from a redback millisecond pulsar using combined optical and radio observations, suggesting accretion disks boost optical emission efficiency.
Findings
Optical pulsations detected at 2.9-3.5 sigma significance.
Pulsed optical emission efficiency comparable to young pulsars.
Optical pulsations may occur independently of accretion disks.
Abstract
Recent detections of optical pulsations from both a transitional and an accreting millisecond pulsar have revealed unexpectedly bright signals, suggesting that the presence of an accretion disk enhances the efficiency of optical emission, possibly via synchrotron radiation from accelerated particles. In this work, we present optical observations of the redback millisecond pulsar PSR J2339-0533, obtained with the SiFAP2 photometer mounted on the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo. Data accumulated during the campaign with the longest exposure time (12 hr) suggest that its 18 mag optical counterpart exhibits pulsations at the neutron star's spin frequency. This candidate signal was identified by folding the optical time series using the pulsar ephemeris derived from nearly simultaneous observations with the 64-m Murriyang (Parkes) radio telescope. The detection significance of the…
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