A millisecond pulsar in a stellar triple system

Authors
  • D.L. Kaplan
  • M.H. van Kerkwijk
  • J. Boyles
  • A.T. Deller
  • S. Chatterjee
  • A. Schechtman-Rook
  • A. Berndsen
  • R.S. Lynch
  • D.R. Lorimer
  • C. Karako-Argaman
  • V.M. Kaspi
  • V.I. Kondratiev
  • M.A. McLaughlin
  • J. van Leeuwen
  • R. Rosen
  • M.S.E. Roberts
  • K. Stovall
Publication date 2014
Journal Nature
Volume | Issue number 505 | 7484
Pages (from-to) 520-524
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Gravitationally bound three-body systems have been studied for hundreds of years1, 2 and are common in our Galaxy3, 4. They show complex orbital interactions, which can constrain the compositions, masses and interior structures of the bodies5 and test theories of gravity6, if sufficiently precise measurements are available. A triple system containing a radio pulsar could provide such measurements, but the only previously known such system, PSR B1620-26 (refs 7, 8; with a millisecond pulsar, a white dwarf, and a planetary-mass object in an orbit of several decades), shows only weak interactions. Here we report precision timing and multiwavelength observations of PSR J0337+1715, a millisecond pulsar in a hierarchical triple system with two other stars. Strong gravitational interactions are apparent and provide the masses of the pulsar (1.4378(13) , where is the solar mass and the parentheses contain the uncertainty in the final decimal places) and the two white dwarf companions (0.19751(15) and 0.4101(3) ), as well as the inclinations of the orbits (both about 39.2°). The unexpectedly coplanar and nearly circular orbits indicate a complex and exotic evolutionary past that differs from those of known stellar systems. The gravitational field of the outer white dwarf strongly accelerates the inner binary containing the neutron star, and the system will thus provide an ideal laboratory in which to test the strong equivalence principle of general relativity.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12917
Permalink to this page
Back