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Connecting the young pulsars in Milky Way globular clusters with white dwarf mergers and the M81 fast radio burst

Kyle Kremer, Jim Fuller, Anthony L. Piro, S. M. Ransom

2023Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters31 citationsDOI

Abstract

ABSTRACT The detections of four apparently young radio pulsars in the Milky Way globular clusters are difficult to reconcile with standard neutron star formation scenarios associated with massive star evolution. Here, we discuss formation of these young pulsars through white dwarf mergers in dynamically old clusters that have undergone core collapse. Based on observed properties of magnetic white dwarfs, we argue neutron stars formed via white dwarf merger are born with spin periods of roughly $10{\!-\!}100\,$ ms and magnetic fields of roughly $10^{11}{\!-\!}10^{13}\,$ G. As these neutron stars spin down via magnetic dipole radiation, they naturally reproduce the four observed young pulsars in the Milky Way clusters. Rates inferred from N-body cluster simulations as well as the binarity, host cluster properties, and cluster offsets observed for these young pulsars hint further at a white dwarf merger origin. These young pulsars may be descendants of neutron stars capable of powering fast radio bursts analogous to the bursts observed recently in a globular cluster in M81.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsGlobular clusterAstrophysicsWhite dwarfNeutron starMilky WayPulsarStar clusterAstronomyOpen clusterCluster (spacecraft)StarsProgramming languageComputer sciencePulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeStellar, planetary, and galactic studies
Connecting the young pulsars in Milky Way globular clusters with white dwarf mergers and the M81 fast radio burst | Litcius