TY - JOUR
T1 - A 1.9 solar-mass neutron star candidate in a 2-year orbit
AU - El-Badry, Kareem
AU - D. Simon, Joshua
AU - Reggiani, Henrique
AU - Rix, Hans-Walter
AU - Latham, David W.
AU - Bieryla, Allyson
AU - A. Buchhave, Lars
AU - Shahaf, Sahar
AU - Mazeh, Tsevi
AU - Chakrabarti, Sukanya
AU - Guhathakurta, Puragra
AU - V. Ilyin, Ilya
AU - Tauris, Thomas
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - We report discovery and characterization of a main-sequence G star orbiting a dark object with mass 1.90±0.04 M⊙. The system was discovered via Gaia astrometry and has an orbital period of 731 days. We obtained multi-epoch RV follow-up over a period of 639 days, allowing us to refine the Gaia orbitalsolution and precisely constrain the masses of both components. The luminous star is a ≳ 12 Gyrold, low-metallicity halo star near the main-sequence turnoff (Teff ≈ 6000 K; log g/ cm s−2 ≈ 4.0; [Fe/H] ≈ −1.25; M ≈ 0.79 M⊙) with a highly enhanced lithium abundance. The RV mass function sets a minimum companion mass for an edge-on orbit of M2 > 1.67 M⊙, well above the Chandrasekhar limit. The Gaia inclination constraint, i = 68.7 ± 1.4 deg, then implies a companionmass of M2 = 1.90 ± 0.04 M⊙. The companion is most likely a massive neutron star: the only viable alternative is two massive white dwarfs in a close binary, but this scenario is disfavored on evolutionary grounds. The system’s low eccentricity (e = 0.122 ± 0.002) disfavors dynamical formation channelsand implies that the neutron star likely formed with little mass loss (≲ 1 M⊙) and with a weak natal kick (vkick ≲ 20 km s−1 ). Stronger kicks with more mass loss are not fully ruled out but would imply that a larger population of similar systems with higher eccentricities should exist. The current orbit istoo small to have accommodated the neutron star progenitor as a red supergiant or super-AGB star. The simplest formation scenario – isolated binary evolution – requires the system to have survived unstable mass transfer and common envelope evolution with a donor-to-accretor mass ratio > 10. Thesystem, which we call Gaia NS1, is likely a progenitor of symbiotic X-ray binaries and long-period millisecond pulsars. Its discovery challenges binary evolution models and bodes well for Gaia’s census of compact objects in wide binaries.
AB - We report discovery and characterization of a main-sequence G star orbiting a dark object with mass 1.90±0.04 M⊙. The system was discovered via Gaia astrometry and has an orbital period of 731 days. We obtained multi-epoch RV follow-up over a period of 639 days, allowing us to refine the Gaia orbitalsolution and precisely constrain the masses of both components. The luminous star is a ≳ 12 Gyrold, low-metallicity halo star near the main-sequence turnoff (Teff ≈ 6000 K; log g/ cm s−2 ≈ 4.0; [Fe/H] ≈ −1.25; M ≈ 0.79 M⊙) with a highly enhanced lithium abundance. The RV mass function sets a minimum companion mass for an edge-on orbit of M2 > 1.67 M⊙, well above the Chandrasekhar limit. The Gaia inclination constraint, i = 68.7 ± 1.4 deg, then implies a companionmass of M2 = 1.90 ± 0.04 M⊙. The companion is most likely a massive neutron star: the only viable alternative is two massive white dwarfs in a close binary, but this scenario is disfavored on evolutionary grounds. The system’s low eccentricity (e = 0.122 ± 0.002) disfavors dynamical formation channelsand implies that the neutron star likely formed with little mass loss (≲ 1 M⊙) and with a weak natal kick (vkick ≲ 20 km s−1 ). Stronger kicks with more mass loss are not fully ruled out but would imply that a larger population of similar systems with higher eccentricities should exist. The current orbit istoo small to have accommodated the neutron star progenitor as a red supergiant or super-AGB star. The simplest formation scenario – isolated binary evolution – requires the system to have survived unstable mass transfer and common envelope evolution with a donor-to-accretor mass ratio > 10. Thesystem, which we call Gaia NS1, is likely a progenitor of symbiotic X-ray binaries and long-period millisecond pulsars. Its discovery challenges binary evolution models and bodes well for Gaia’s census of compact objects in wide binaries.
KW - binaries: spectroscopic
KW - stars: evolution
KW - stars: neutron
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85194576815&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.33232/001c.116675
DO - 10.33232/001c.116675
M3 - Journal article
SN - 2565-6120
VL - 7
JO - Open Journal of Astrophysics
JF - Open Journal of Astrophysics
IS - 27
ER -