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Astronomers Confirm Rare Binary with Neutron Star Stripping Companion

Discovery of a millisecond pulsar and its helium-core companion provides first direct evidence for common envelope evolution in binary star systems.

© ESA; ICE-CSIC/D; Futselaar/Marino et al.
Image
An AI impression of a compact binary system. Image credit: Gemini AI.

Overview

  • China’s FAST telescope observed a rapidly spinning neutron star stripping its companion star to a helium core, forming a rare 'spider pulsar.'
  • The binary system, PSR J1928+1815, has a 3.6-hour orbital period, with the pulsar's radio signals eclipsed by its companion for one-sixth of each orbit.
  • The companion star, undetectable outside radio wavelengths, is a hydrogen-stripped helium core roughly as massive as the Sun.
  • This discovery offers the first direct confirmation of the long-theorized common envelope evolutionary process in binary star systems.
  • Published in Science on May 22, 2025, the findings shed light on the formation of gravitational-wave progenitors and suggest over a dozen similar systems may exist in the Milky Way.