摘要: Evolution of a large part of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) leads to the
formation of rapidly rotating pulsars with a helium white dwarf (He WD)
companion. Observations indicate that some He WDs in binary pulsar systems are
ultracool (with the effective temperatures $T_{\rm eff}\lesssim$ 4000\, K). It
is hard to cool down a He WD to such low temperatures within the Hubble time,
because a thick hydrogen envelope was left behind around the He core after the
mass transfer process. A possible mechanism that can accelerate the WD cooling
is the evaporative wind mass loss from the He WD driven by the high-energy
radiation from the recycled pulsar. In this paper, we evolve a large number of
LMXBs and investigate the influence of the pulsar's high-energy radiation on
the WD cooling with different input parameters, including the neutron star's
spin-down luminosity, the evaporation efficiency and the metallicity of the
companion star. By comparing our results with observations we note that, for
relatively hot He WDs (with $T_{\rm eff}> 7000$ K), standard WD cooling without
evaporation considered is able to reproduce their temperatures, while
evaporation is probably required for the He WDs with relatively low
temperatures ($T_{\rm eff}$ <5000 K).