| Event type | Neutron star, binary pulsar | 
|---|---|
| Pulsar | |
| Date | March 2008 | 
| Duration | 7514 and 4285 sec | 
| Instrument | Green Bank Telescope | 
| Constellation | Virgo | 
| Right ascension | 17h 48m 52.9522s (287.2205342 d) | 
| Declination | -20h 21m 38.90s (-20.360881 d) | 
| Epoch | 2000 | 
| Galactic coordinates | NGC 6440 | 
| Distance | 223 pc | 
| Source | Simba | 
| Remnant | 17 | 
| Host | https://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-ref?bibcode=2008ApJ...675..670F | 
| Colour (B-V) | BRIGHT 2 | 
| Peak apparent magnitude | 2.74(+0.21/-0.21) | 
| Other designations | NGC 6440B | 
| Website | https://simbad.cds.unistra.fr/mobile/object.html?object_name=PSR%20J1748-2021B | 
|  Related media on Commons | |
PSR J1748-2021B is the largest known pulsar with 2.74(+0.21/-0.21) solar masses. It was first discovered by Freire[1] using the Green Bank Telescope S band receiver and Pulsar Spigot Spectrometer in Terzan 5 of globular cluster M-5.[2]
A later estimate puts the mass as 2.548(+0.047/-0.078) solar masses.[3]
References
- ↑ Freire, Paulo C. C.; Ransom, Scott M.; Bégin, Steve; Stairs, Ingrid H.; Hessels, Jason W. T.; Frey, Lucille H.; Camilo, Fernando (March 2008). "Eight New Millisecond Pulsars in NGC 6440 and NGC 6441". The Astrophysical Journal. 675 (1): 670–682. arXiv:0711.0925. doi:10.1086/526338. ISSN 0004-637X.
- ↑ Kumar, Sandeep S.; Kenath, Arun; Sivaram, C. (2020-05-01). "Effects of dark matter on the upper bound mass of neutron stars". Physics of the Dark Universe. 28: 100507. doi:10.1016/j.dark.2020.100507. ISSN 2212-6864. S2CID 214343780.
- ↑ Clifford, Nick (May 2019). Long-Term Timing of Pulsars in NGC 6440: An Updated Mass Limit of Millisecond Pulsar J1748-2021B (Thesis).
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