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Published 1991 | public
Journal Article

Old Pulsars in the Low-Density Globular Clusters M13 and M53

Abstract

Millisecond pulsars are conventionally assumed to be spun up through the action of binary companions, although some subsequently lose their companions and appear as isolated pulsars. Such objects should therefore be more numerous in dense stellar systems. We report here the surprising discovery of two pulsars in low-density globular clusters: one is a single 10-ms pulsar (1639+36) in M13 (NGC620S), the other a 33-ms pulsar (1310+ 18) in a 256-day binary in MS3 (NGCS02S). Their ages, inferred from their luminosities and constraints on their period derivatives, seem to be -10^9 years, significantly greater than previously reported ages (≤10^8 years) of cluster pulsars^1. The implied birth rate is inconsistent with the conventional two-body tidal capture model^2,^3, suggesting that an alternative mechanism such as tidal capture between primordial binaries and a reservoir of (hundreds of) primordial neutron stars may dominate the production of tidal binaries in such clusters^1,^4• The period derivative of PSR1639+36 is surprisingly small, and may be corrupted by acceleration due to the mean gravitational potential of the cluster. We discovered the pulsars during a survey of globular^5.

Additional Information

© 1991 Nature Publishing Group. Received 10 August accepted 9 November 1990. We thank A. S. Fruchter for donation of telescope time, J. H. Taylor for the TEMPO software package, and E. S. Phinney and S. Djorgovski for discussions. This work was supported by NSF Presidential Young Investigator awards (TAP. and S.R.K.), the Department of Energy (T.A.P.), an NSF Graduate Felloship (SBA), and an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship (S.R.K.). Arecibo Observatory is part of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Centre, operated by Cornell University under contract with the NSF.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023