From One to Two: A Second Binary Millisecond Pulsar in the Globular Cluster M92 (NGC 6341)

Abstract

We report the discovery and phase connected-timing solution of a second millisecond binary pulsar, PSR J1717+4308B (M92B), in the globular cluster M92 (NGC 6341) using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope. This new pulsar, with a spin period of 3.51 ms and a dispersion measure (DM) of 35.29 pc cm-3, was discovered through frequency-domain acceleration searches. The timing solution shows that M92B is in a binary system with an orbital period of 2.3 days, an eccentricity of 4.8 × 10-4, and a minimum companion mass of 0.2 \,M. M92B lies within the cluster core radius in projection, and its negative spin period derivative (P) is consistent with acceleration in the cluster potential. The measured negative P of M92B, together with a DM consistent with that of M92A (< 0.2\, pc\,cm-3), confirms that both pulsars are members of the cluster. A Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis based on these two pulsars yields broad constraints on the core structural parameters of M92 that are consistent with N-body dynamical modeling. This demonstrates that pulsar timing can provide useful dynamical information in sparse pulsar samples.

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