CHIME Discovery of a Binary Pulsar with a Massive Non-Degenerate Companion

Abstract

Of the more than 3,000 radio pulsars currently known, only 300 are in binary systems, and only five of these consist of young pulsars with massive non-degenerate companions. We present the discovery and initial timing, accomplished using the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment telescope (CHIME), of the sixth such binary pulsar, PSR J2108+4516, a 0.577-s radio pulsar in a 269-day orbit of eccentricity 0.09 with a companion of minimum mass 11 M. Notably, the pulsar undergoes periods of substantial eclipse, disappearing from the CHIME 400-800 MHz observing band for a large fraction of its orbit, and displays significant dispersion measure and scattering variations throughout its orbit, pointing to the possibility of a circumstellar disk or very dense stellar wind associated with the companion star. Subarcsecond resolution imaging with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array unambiguously demonstrates that the companion is a bright, V 11 OBe star, EM* UHA 138, located at a distance of 3.26(14) kpc. Archival optical observations of approximately suggest a companion mass ranging from 17.5 M < M c < 23 M, in turn constraining the orbital inclination angle to 50.3 i 58.3. With further multi-wavelength followup, PSR J2108+4516 promises to serve as another rare laboratory for the exploration of companion winds, circumstellar disks, and short-term evolution through extended-body orbital dynamics.

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