The slowest spinning Galactic-field spider PSR J1932+2121: A history of inefficient mass transfer

Abstract

The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope is discovering hundreds of new pulsars, including a slowly spinning compact binary millisecond pulsar (spin period P spin=14.2\,ms) which showed radio eclipses and evidence of ablation of its companion: PSR J1932+2121. Its orbital period is P orb=0.08\,d and the minimum companion mass is estimated as 0.12\,. Hence, this pulsar is classified as part of the Galactic-field spider (redback) population. However, it spins almost an order of magnitude slower than other Galactic-field spiders. Using detailed evolutionary calculations with MESA, we model the formation, mass-transfer and radio-pulsar phases, in order to explain the observed properties of PSR\,J1932+2121. We find that PSR\,J1932+2121 is a redback that has experienced an inefficient mass-transfer phase resulting in a lower accretion efficiency (in the range of 0.3 to 0.5) and subsequently slower spin compared to other spiders. We narrow down the initial range of P orb that best reproduces its properties, to 2.0--2.6\,d. Current models of accretion-induced magnetic field decay are not able to explain its unusually high surface magnetic field of 2× 109\,G. Hence, PSR\,J1932+2121 provides a unique opportunity to study inefficient accretion-induced spin up and surface magnetic field decay of pulsars.

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