Affiliation:
1. Department of Physics, Norwegian University of Science and Technology , NO-7491 Trondheim , Norway
2. Departament de Física, EEBE, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya , Av. Eduard Maristany 16, E-08019 Barcelona , Spain
3. Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory , Los Alamos, NM 87545 , USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Radio emission from pulsars can be used to map out their distances through dispersion measure (DM), which quantifies the amount of radio pulse dispersion. However, this method relies on accurately modelling the free electron density in the line of sight. Here, we present a detailed study of the multiwavelength emission from PSR J1720−0534, a black widow compact binary millisecond pulsar discovered in 2021, which the latest electron density model of the Galaxy places at only 191 pc. We obtained and analysed deep multiwavelength observations in the γ-ray (Fermi-Large Area Telescope, 2008–2022), optical (Las Cumbres Observatory, 2.7 h), near-infrared (Nordic Optical Telescope, 3.5 h), and X-ray (Swift-X-Ray Telescope, 10 ks) bands. We found no significant detection of γ-ray, optical, near-infrared, or X-ray counterparts around the radio-timing position of PSR J1720−0534, which we thus nickname ‘the invisible black widow’. Employing the most constraining near-infrared limit (J > 23.4 mag), we established a lower limit on the source distance, d > 1.1 kpc, assuming conservative properties for the black widow companion star. This distance lower limit differs drastically (by a factor of more than 5) from the Yao et al. DM distance estimate. We attribute this difference to the inclusion in the Yao et al. model of a large and dense component towards the North Polar Spur. Considering our results and recent parallax distances to other pulsars in this direction, we argue that such a local and large component in the electron density model of the Galaxy is unnecessary.
Funder
European Research Council
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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