Bibliographic Details
Title: |
The Nearest Neutron Star Candidate in a Binary Revealed by Optical Time-domain Surveys |
Authors: |
Zheng, Ling-Lin, Sun, Mouyuan, Gu, Wei-Min, Yi, Tuan, Zhang, Zhi-Xiang, Wang, Pei, Wang, Junfeng, Wu, Jianfeng, Wang, Song, Zhang, Jia, Li, Chun-Qian, Shi, Jian-Rong, Shao, Yong, Li, Xiang-Dong, Fu, Jin-Bo, Yang, Fan, Bai, Zhongrui, Bai, Yu, Zhang, Haotong, Liu, Jifeng |
Publication Year: |
2022 |
Collection: |
Astrophysics |
Subject Terms: |
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena, Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics |
More Details: |
Recent studies have revealed the global deposition on Earth of radioactive elements (e.g., $^{60}$Fe) resulting from the metal-enriched ejecta of nearby (within $\sim 100$ pc) supernova explosions. The majority of neutron stars in our Solar neighborhood remain to be discovered. Here we report the discovery of the nearest ($127.7 \pm 0.3$ pc) neutron star candidate in the single-lined spectroscopic binary LAMOST J235456.76+335625.7 (hereafter J2354). Utilizing the multi-epoch spectra and high-cadence periodic light curves, we measure the mass of the visible star ($M_{\rm vis}=0.70\pm 0.05\ M_{\odot}$) and determine the mass function of the invisible object $f(M)=0.525 \pm 0.004\ M_{\odot}$, i.e., the mass of the unseen compact object is $M_{\rm inv} \geq 1.26 \pm 0.03\ M_{\odot}$. The excess UV emission due to a hot supramassive white dwarf is absent. Hence, it is likely that J2354 harbors a neutron star. J2354 is X-ray dim (the $0.1$--$2.4$ keV luminosity $<10^{30}\ {\rm erg\ s^{-1}}$) since it is not detected in the ROSAT all-sky surveys in X-ray. One-hour exceptionally sensitive radio follow-up observations with FAST, the largest single-dish radio telescope, failed to reveal any radio pulsating signals (the potential pulse power at $1.4$ GHz is $<6.8\times 10^{23}\ {\rm erg\ s^{-1}}$). Hence, the neutron star candidate in J2354 can only be discovered via our time-resolved observations. The alternative scenario involving a nearby supramassive cold white dwarf cannot be fully excluded. Our discovery demonstrates a promising way to unveil the missing population of backyard inactive neutron stars or supramassive cold white dwarfs in binaries by exploring the optical time domain, thereby facilitating understanding of the supernovae explosion and metal-enrichment history in our Solar neighborhood. Comment: 35 pages, 8 figures, to be submitted |
Document Type: |
Working Paper |
Access URL: |
http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.04685 |
Accession Number: |
edsarx.2210.04685 |
Database: |
arXiv |