The Origin of the Binary Pulsar J0737-3039B

Abstract

Evolutionary scenarios suggest that the progenitor of the new binary pulsar J0737-3039B ref1,ref2 was a He-star with M > 2.1-2.3~ ref3,ref4. We show that this case implies that the binary must have a large (>120 km/s) center of mass velocity. However, the location, 50 pc from the Galactic plane, suggests that the system has, at high likelihood, a significantly smaller center of mass velocity and a progenitor more massive than 2.1~ is ruled out (at 97% c.l.). A progenitor mass around 1.45~, involving a new previously unseen gravitational collapse, is kinematically favored. The low mass progenitor is consistent with the recent scintillations based velocity measurement of 66 15 km/s ref12new (and which also rules out the high mass solution at 99% c.l.) and inconsistent with the higher earlier estimates of 141 8.5 km/s ref11new. Direct proper motion measurements, that should be available within a year or so, should better help to distinguish between the two scenarios.

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