Literature DB >> 27462808

A radio-pulsing white dwarf binary star.

T R Marsh1, B T Gänsicke1, S Hümmerich2,3, F-J Hambsch2,3,4, K Bernhard2,3, C Lloyd5, E Breedt1, E R Stanway1, D T Steeghs1, S G Parsons6, O Toloza1, M R Schreiber6, P G Jonker7,8, J van Roestel8, T Kupfer9, A F Pala1, V S Dhillon10,11,12, L K Hardy10, S P Littlefair10, A Aungwerojwit13, S Arjyotha14, D Koester15, J J Bochinski16, C A Haswell16, P Frank2, P J Wheatley1.   

Abstract

White dwarfs are compact stars, similar in size to Earth but approximately 200,000 times more massive. Isolated white dwarfs emit most of their power from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths, but when in close orbits with less dense stars, white dwarfs can strip material from their companions and the resulting mass transfer can generate atomic line and X-ray emission, as well as near- and mid-infrared radiation if the white dwarf is magnetic. However, even in binaries, white dwarfs are rarely detected at far-infrared or radio frequencies. Here we report the discovery of a white dwarf/cool star binary that emits from X-ray to radio wavelengths. The star, AR Scorpii (henceforth AR Sco), was classified in the early 1970s as a δ-Scuti star, a common variety of periodic variable star. Our observations reveal instead a 3.56-hour period close binary, pulsing in brightness on a period of 1.97 minutes. The pulses are so intense that AR Sco's optical flux can increase by a factor of four within 30 seconds, and they are also detectable at radio frequencies. They reflect the spin of a magnetic white dwarf, which we find to be slowing down on a 107-year timescale. The spin-down power is an order of magnitude larger than that seen in electromagnetic radiation, which, together with an absence of obvious signs of accretion, suggests that AR Sco is primarily spin-powered. Although the pulsations are driven by the white dwarf's spin, they mainly originate from the cool star. AR Sco's broadband spectrum is characteristic of synchrotron radiation, requiring relativistic electrons. These must either originate from near the white dwarf or be generated in situ at the M star through direct interaction with the white dwarf's magnetosphere.

Year:  2016        PMID: 27462808     DOI: 10.1038/nature18620

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  4 in total

1.  Discovery of radio emission from the brown dwarf LP944-20.

Authors:  E Berger; S Ball; K M Becker; M Clarke; D A Frail; T A Fukuda; I M Hoffman; R Mellon; E Momjian; N W Murphy; S H Teng; T Woodruff; B A Zauderer; R T Zavala
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2001-03-15       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  A radio pulsar/x-ray binary link.

Authors:  Anne M Archibald; Ingrid H Stairs; Scott M Ransom; Victoria M Kaspi; Vladislav I Kondratiev; Duncan R Lorimer; Maura A McLaughlin; Jason Boyles; Jason W T Hessels; Ryan Lynch; Joeri van Leeuwen; Mallory S E Roberts; Frederick Jenet; David J Champion; Rachel Rosen; Brad N Barlow; Bart H Dunlap; Ronald A Remillard
Journal:  Science       Date:  2009-05-21       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Swings between rotation and accretion power in a binary millisecond pulsar.

Authors:  A Papitto; C Ferrigno; E Bozzo; N Rea; L Pavan; L Burderi; M Burgay; S Campana; T Di Salvo; M Falanga; M D Filipović; P C C Freire; J W T Hessels; A Possenti; S M Ransom; A Riggio; P Romano; J M Sarkissian; I H Stairs; L Stella; D F Torres; M H Wieringa; G F Wong
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-09-26       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Seismic evidence for the loss of stellar angular momentum before the white-dwarf stage.

Authors:  S Charpinet; G Fontaine; P Brassard
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-09-24       Impact factor: 49.962

  4 in total
  2 in total

1.  Discovery of a radio emitting neutron star with an ultra-long spin period of 76 seconds.

Authors:  Manisha Caleb; Ian Heywood; Benjamin Stappers; Kaustubh Rajwade; Mateusz Malenta; Ewan Barr; Weiwei Chen; Vincent Morello; Sotiris Sanidas; Jakob van den Eijnden; Michael Kramer; David Buckley; Jaco Brink; Sara Elisa Motta; Patrick Woudt; Patrick Weltevrede; Fabian Jankowski; Mayuresh Surnis; Sarah Buchner; Mechiel Christiaan Bezuidenhout; Laura Nicole Driessen; Rob Fender
Journal:  Nat Astron       Date:  2022-05-30       Impact factor: 15.647

2.  A radio transient with unusually slow periodic emission.

Authors:  N Hurley-Walker; X Zhang; A Bahramian; S J McSweeney; T N O'Doherty; P J Hancock; J S Morgan; G E Anderson; G H Heald; T J Galvin
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2022-01-26       Impact factor: 69.504

  2 in total

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