Timing models for the long orbital period binary pulsar PSR B1259-63

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Abstract

The pulsar PSR B1259-63 is in a highly eccentric 3.4-yr orbit with the Be star SS 2883. Timing observations of this pulsar, made over a 7-yr period using the Parkes 64-m radio telescope, cover two periastron passages, in 1990 August and 1994 January. The timing data cannot be fitted by the normal pulsar and Keplerian binary parameters. A timing solution including a (non-precessing) Keplerian orbit and timing noise (represented as a polynomial of fifth order in time) provides a satisfactory fit to the data. However, because the Be star probably has a significant quadrupole moment, we prefer to interpret the data by a combination of timing noise, dominated by a cubic phase term, and ẇ and ẋ terms. We show that the ẇ and ẋ terms are likely to be a result of a precessing orbit caused by the quadrupole moment of the tilted companion star. We further rule out a number of possible physical effects which could contribute to the timing data of PSR B1259-63 on a measurable level.

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Wex, N., Johnston, S., Manchester, R. N., Lyne, A. G., Stappers, B. W., & Bailes, M. (1998). Timing models for the long orbital period binary pulsar PSR B1259-63. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 298(4), 997–1004. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-8711.1998.01700.x

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