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A 62-minute orbital period black widow binary in a wide hierarchical triple.

Kevin B BurdgeThomas R MarshJames FullerEric C BellmIlaria CaiazzoDeepto ChakrabartyMichael W CoughlinKishalay DeVikram S DhillonMatthew J GrahamPablo Rodríguez-GilAmruta D JaodandDavid L KaplanErin KaraAlbert K H KongS R KulkarniKwan-Lok LiStuart P LittlefairWalid A MajidPrzemek MrózAaron B PearlmanE S PhinneyJan van RoestelRobert A SimcoeIgor AndreoniAndrew J DrakeRichard G DekanyDmitry A DuevErik C KoolAshish A MahabalMichael S MedfordReed L RiddleThomas A Prince
Published in: Nature (2022)
Over a dozen millisecond pulsars are ablating low-mass companions in close binary systems. In the original 'black widow', the eight-hour orbital period eclipsing pulsar PSR J1959+2048 (PSR B1957+20) 1 , high-energy emission originating from the pulsar 2 is irradiating and may eventually destroy 3 a low-mass companion. These systems are not only physical laboratories that reveal the interesting results of exposing a close companion star to the relativistic energy output of a pulsar, but are also believed to harbour some of the most massive neutron stars 4 , allowing for robust tests of the neutron star equation of state. Here we report observations of ZTF J1406+1222, a wide hierarchical triple hosting a 62-minute orbital period black widow candidate, the optical flux of which varies by a factor of more than ten. ZTF J1406+1222 pushes the boundaries of evolutionary models 5 , falling below the 80-minute minimum orbital period of hydrogen-rich systems. The wide tertiary companion is a rare low-metallicity cool subdwarf star, and the system has a Galactic halo orbit consistent with passing near the Galactic Centre, making it a probe of formation channels, neutron star kick physics 6 and binary evolution.
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