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Two Millisecond Pulsars Discovered by the PALFA Survey and a Shapiro Delay Measurement

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arxiv 1208.1228 v1 pith:6V6HJ5GR submitted 2012-08-06 astro-ph.SR

Two Millisecond Pulsars Discovered by the PALFA Survey and a Shapiro Delay Measurement

classification astro-ph.SR
keywords delayj1949massprecisepulsarshapirosystemtiming
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present two millisecond pulsar discoveries from the PALFA survey of the Galactic plane with the Arecibo telescope. PSR J1955+2527 is an isolated pulsar with a period of 4.87 ms, and PSR J1949+3106 has a period of 13.14 ms and is in a 1.9-day binary system with a massive companion. Their timing solutions, based on 4 years of timing measurements with the Arecibo, Green Bank, Nan\c{c}ay and Jodrell Bank telescopes, allow precise determination of spin and astrometric parameters, including precise determinations of their proper motions. For PSR J1949+3106, we can clearly detect the Shapiro delay. From this we measure the pulsar mass to be 1.47(+0.43/-0.31) solar masses, the companion mass to be 0.85(+0.14/-0.11) solar masses and the orbital inclination to be i = 79.9(+1.6/-1.9) degrees, where uncertainties correspond to +/- 1-\sigma\ confidence levels. With continued timing, we expect to also be able to detect the advance of periastron for the J1949+3106 system. This effect, combined with the Shapiro delay, will eventually provide very precise mass measurements for this system and a test of general relativity.

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