-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me if this article is cited
- Alert me if this article is corrected
|
||||||||||||||||||
A&A 439, 433-441 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20052634
Observations of the companion to the pulsar PSR B1718-19
The role of tidal circularisation
T. Janssen1 and M. H. van Kerkwijk1, 21 Astronomical Institute, Utrecht University, PO Box 80000, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands
e-mail: T.Janssen@phys.uu.nl
2 Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Toronto, 60 St George Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H8, Canada
e-mail: mhvk@astro.utoronto.ca
(Received 3 January 2005 / Accepted 6 April 2005)
Abstract
We present optical and infrared observations taken with the
Very Large Telescope of the eclipsing binary pulsar system
PSR B1718-19
. The candidate companion of the pulsar, identified earlier
in Hubble Space Telescope observations, has been detected in all
three bands, R, I, and J. These detections allowed us to derive
constraints on temperature, radius, and mass, pointing to a companion
that has expanded to a radius between one of a main sequence star and
one at the Roche-limit. We focus on the role of tidal circularisation
in the system, which will have transformed the initially eccentric
orbit expected from formation scenarios into the nearly circular orbit
presently observed. Based on simple energy balance arguments, we are
able to draw a picture of the companion's evolution resulting from the
energy deposition in the star due to circularisation. In this picture,
our measurement of the companion's parameters is consistent with the
expected initial eccentricity. However, with the present
understanding of tidal dissipation, it remains difficult to account for
the short time in which the system was circularised.
Key words: binaries: eclipsing -- pulsars: individual: PSR B1718-19 -- stellar dynamics
SIMBAD Objects
Tables at the CDS
© ESO 2005
| What is OpenURL? |
- If your librarian has set up your subscription with an OpenURL resolver, OpenURL links appear automatically on the abstract pages.
- You can define your own OpenURL resolver with your EDPS Account. In this case your choice will be given priority over that of your library.
- You can use an add-on for your browser (Firefox or I.E.) to display OpenURL links on a page (see http://www.openly.com/openurlref/). You should disable this module if you wish to use the OpenURL server that you or your library have defined.

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook