X-ray binaries and their descendants: Binary radio pulsars. Evidence for three classes of neutron stars?
Jul, 200410 pages
Published in:
- ESA Spec.Publ. 552 (2004) 185
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e-Print:
- astro-ph/0407451 [astro-ph]
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Abstract: (arXiv)
An important recent discovery by Pfahl et al. (2002) is that there are two classes of Be X-ray binaries: one with orbits of small eccentricity (<0.25), in which the neutron stars received hardly any kick velocity at birth and a class with substantial orbital eccentricities, in which the neutron stars received a kick velocity of order 100 km/s at birth. Also many of the double neutron stars (5 out of 7) have a low orbital eccentricity (0.09 to 0.27), which indicates that their second-born neutron stars received hardly any velocity kick at birth. These second-born neutron stars tend to have low masses (1.25 to 1.35 Msun). It is proposed that the low-mass, low-kick neutron stars are formed by the electron capture of degenerate O-Ne-Mg cores of stars with initial masses below about 12-14 Msun, while the high-kick neutron stars originated from the photo-disintegration collapse of the iron cores of stars which started out with masses larger than this limit. The latter group may be further subdivided into two classes of different mass.References(1)
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