Double Neutron Stars: Evidence For Two Different Neutron-Star Formation Mechanisms
Abstract
Six of the eight double neutron stars known in the Galactic disk have low orbital eccentricities (< 0.27) indicating that their second-born neutron stars received only very small velocity kicks at birth. This is similar to the case of the B-emission X-ray binaries, where a sizable fraction of the neutron stars received hardly any velocity kick at birth (Pfahl et al. 2002). The masses of the second-born neutron stars in five of the six low-eccentricity double neutron stars are remarkably low (between 1.18 and 1.30Msolar). It is argued that these low-mass, low-kick neutron stars were formed by the electron-capture collapse of the degenerate O-Ne-Mg cores of helium stars less massive than about 3.5Msolar, whereas the higher-mass, higher kick-velocity neutron stars were formed by the collapses of the iron cores of higher initial mass. The absence of low-velocity single young radio pulsars (Hobbs et al. 2005) is consistent with the model proposed by Podsiadlowski et al. (2004), in which the electron-capture collapse of degenerate 0-Ne-Mg cores can only occur in binary systems, and not in single stars.
- Publication:
-
The Multicolored Landscape of Compact Objects and Their Explosive Origins
- Pub Date:
- August 2007
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0704.1215
- Bibcode:
- 2007AIPC..924..598V
- Keywords:
-
- 97.60.Jd;
- 97.10.Bt;
- 97.80.Jp;
- Neutron stars;
- Star formation;
- X-ray binaries;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 9 pages. Invited talk at `The Multicoloured Landscape of Compact Objects and their Explosive Origins', Cefalu', 2006 June 11-24 (AIP Conf. Proc.), eds. L. Burderi et al., in press