Dictionary Definition
pulsar n : a degenerate neutron star; small and
extremely dense; rotates very fast and emits regular pulses of
polarized radiation
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- : A rotating neutron star that emits radio pulses periodically
Verb
pulsarConjugation
es-conj-ar pulsExtensive Definition
Pulsars are highly magnetized rotating neutron
stars which emit a beam of detectable electromagnetic
radiation in the form of radio waves. Their observed periods
range from 1.5 ms to 8.5 s. The radiation can only be observed when
the beam of emission is pointing towards the Earth. This is called
the lighthouse effect and gives rise to the pulsed nature that
gives pulsars their name. Because neutron stars are very dense
objects, the rotation period and thus the interval between observed
pulses are very regular. For some pulsars, the regularity of
pulsation is as precise as an atomic
clock. Pulsars are known to have planets orbiting them, as in
the case of PSR
B1257+12. Werner Becker of the
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik said in 2006,
"The theory of how pulsars emit their radiation is still in its
infancy, even after nearly forty years of work."
History
Discovery
The first pulsar was observed in July 1968 by Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Antony Hewish. Initially baffled as to the seemingly unnatural regularity of its emissions, they dubbed their discovery LGM-1, for "little green men" (a comical name for intelligent beings of extraterrestrial origin). Their pulsar was later dubbed CP 1919, and is now known by a number of designators including PSR 1919+21, PSR B1919+21 and PSR J1921+2153.According to Martin Rees,
the hypothesis that pulsars were beacons from extraterrestrial
civilizations was never taken very seriously. However,
astrophysicist Peter A.
Sturrock writes that the possibility of an extraterrestrial
origin was "seriously considered ... They debated this possibility
and decided that, if this proved to be correct, they could not make
an announcement without checking with higher authorities. There was
even some discussion about whether it might be in the best
interests of mankind to destroy the evidence and forget it!"
(Sturrock, 154)
Although CP 1919 emits in radio
wavelengths, pulsars have, subsequently, been found to emit in
the X-ray
and/or gamma ray
wavelengths.
The word pulsar is a contraction of "pulsating
star", and first appeared in print in 1968: The suggestion that
pulsars were rotating neutron stars was put forth independently by
Thomas
Gold and Franco
Pacini in 1968, and was soon
proven beyond doubt by the discovery of a pulsar with a very short
(33-millisecond)
pulse period in the Crab
nebula.
In 1974, Antony Hewish
became the first astronomer to be awarded the Nobel
Prize in physics. Considerable controversy is associated with
the fact that Professor Hewish was awarded the prize while Bell,
who made the initial discovery while she was his Ph.D student, was
not.
Subsequent history
In 1974, Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr. and Russell Hulse discovered, for the first time, a pulsar in a binary system, PSR B1913+16. This pulsar orbits another neutron star with an orbital period of just eight hours. Einstein's theory of general relativity predicts that this system should emit strong gravitational radiation, causing the orbit to continually contract as it loses orbital energy. Observations of the pulsar soon confirmed this prediction, providing the first ever evidence of the existence of gravitational waves. As of 2004, observations of this pulsar continue to agree with general relativity. In 1993, the Nobel prize in physics was awarded to Taylor and Hulse for the discovery of this pulsar.In 1982, a pulsar with a
rotation period of just 1.6 milliseconds was discovered, by
Shri
Kulkarni and Don Backer.
Observations soon revealed that its magnetic field was much weaker
than ordinary pulsars, while further discoveries cemented the idea
that a new class of object, the "millisecond
pulsars" (MSPs) had been found. MSPs are believed to be the end
product of X-ray
binaries. Owing to their extraordinarily rapid and stable
rotation, MSPs can be used by astronomers as clocks
rivalling the stability of the best atomic
clocks on Earth. Factors affecting the arrival time of pulses
at the Earth by more than a few hundred nanoseconds can be easily
detected and used to make precise measurements. Physical parameters
accessible through pulsar timing include the 3D position of the
pulsar, its proper
motion, the electron content of the
interstellar
medium along the propagation path, the orbital parameters of
any binary companion, the pulsar rotation period and its evolution
with time. (These are computed from the raw timing data by Tempo,
a computer program specialized for this task.) After these factors
have been taken into account, deviations between the observed
arrival times and predictions made using these parameters can be
found and attributed to one of three possibilities: intrinsic
variations in the spin period of the pulsar, errors in the
realization of Terrestrial
Time against which arrival times were measured, or the presence
of background gravitational waves. Scientists are currently
attempting to resolve these possibilities by comparing the
deviations seen amongst several different pulsars, forming what is
known as a Pulsar
Timing Array. With luck, these efforts may lead to a time scale a
factor of ten or better than currently available, and the first
ever direct detection of gravitational waves.
The first ever extrasolar
planets were found orbiting a MSP, by Aleksander
Wolszczan. This discovery presented important evidence
concerning the widespread existence of planets outside the solar
system, although it is very unlikely that any life form could
survive in the environment of intense radiation near a
pulsar.
Pulsar classes
Three distinct classes of pulsars are currently known to astronomers, according to the source of energy that powers the radiation:- Rotation-powered pulsars, where the loss of rotational energy of the star powers the radiation
- Accretion-powered pulsars (accounting for most but not all X-ray pulsars), where the gravitational potential energy of accreted matter is the energy source (producing X-rays that are observable from Earth), and
- Magnetars, where the decay of an extremely strong magnetic field powers the radiation.
Although all three classes of objects are neutron
stars, their observable behaviour and the underlying physics are
quite different. There are, however, connections. For example,
X-ray
pulsars are probably old rotation-powered pulsars that have
already lost most of their energy, and have only become visible
again after their binary
companions expanded and began transferring matter on to the
neutron star. The process of accretion can in turn transfer enough
angular
momentum to the neutron star to "recycle" it as a
rotation-powered millisecond
pulsar.
Naming
Initially pulsars were named with letters of the
discovering observatory followed by their right ascension (e.g. CP
1919). As more pulsars were discovered, the letter code became
unwieldy and so the convention was then superseded by the letters
PSR (Pulsating Source of Radio) followed by the pulsar's right
ascension and degrees of declination (e.g. PSR 0531+21) and
sometimes declination to a tenth of a degree (e.g. PSR 1913+167).
Pulsars that are very close together sometimes have letters
appended (e.g. PSR 0021-72C and PSR 0021-72D).
The modern convention is to prefix the older
numbers with a B (e.g. PSR B1919+21) with the B meaning the
coordinates are for the 1950.0 epoch. All new pulsars have a J
indicating 2000.0 coordinates and also have declination including
minutes (e.g. PSR J1921+2153). Pulsars that were discovered before
1993 tend to retain their B names rather than use their J names
(e.g. PSR J1921+2153 is more commonly known as PSR B1919+21).
Recently discovered pulsars only have a J name (e.g. PSR
J0437-4715). All pulsars have a J name that provides more precise
coordinates of its location in the sky.
Glitch prediction
In June 2006, astronomer John
Middleditch and his team at LANL announced the
first prediction of glitches
with observational data from the
Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. They used observations of the
pulsar PSR
J0537-6910.
Applications
The study of pulsars has resulted in many
applications in physics and astronomy. Striking examples include
the confirmation of the existence of gravitational
radiation as predicted by general
relativity and the first detection of an extrasolar planetary
system.
As probes of the interstellar medium
The radiation from pulsars passes through the interstellar medium (ISM) before reaching Earth. Free electrons in the warm (8000 K), ionized component of the ISM and H II regions affect the radiation in two primary ways. The resulting changes to the pulsar's radiation provide an important probe of the ISM itself.Due to the dispersive
nature of the interstellar plasma, lower-frequency radio
waves travel through the medium faster than higher-frequency radio
waves. The resulting delay in the arrival of pulses at a range of
frequencies is directly measurable as the dispersion measure of the
pulsar. The dispersion measure is the total column
density of free electrons between the observer and the pulsar,
- \mathrm = \int_0^D n_e(s) ds,
Additionally, turbulence in the
interstellar gas causes density inhomogeneities in the ISM which
cause scattering of
the radio waves from the pulsar. The resulting scintillation
of the radio waves—the same effect as the twinkling of a
star in visible
light due to density variations in the Earth's
atmosphere—can be used to reconstruct information about
the small scale variations in the ISM. Due to the high velocity (up
to several hundred km/sec) of many pulsars, a single pulsar scans
the ISM rapidly, which results in changing scintillation patterns
over timescales of a few minutes.
Significant pulsars
- The first radio pulsar CP 1919 (now known as PSR 1919+21), with a pulse period of 1.337 seconds and a pulse width of 0.04 second, was discovered in 1967 (Nature 217:709-713, 1968).
- The first binary pulsar, PSR 1913+16, whose orbit is decaying at the exact rate predicted due to the emission of gravitational radiation by general relativity
- The first millisecond pulsar, PSR B1937+21
- The brightest millisecond pulsar, PSR J0437-4715
- The first X-ray pulsar, Cen X-3
- The first accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar, SAX J1808.4-3658
- The first extrasolar planets to be discovered orbit the pulsar PSR B1257+12
- The first double pulsar binary system, PSR J0737−3039
- The magnetar SGR 1806-20 produced the largest burst of energy in the Galaxy ever experimentally recorded on 27 December 2004
- PSR B1931+24 "... appears as a normal pulsar for about a week and then 'switches off' for about one month before emitting pulses again. [..] this pulsar slows down more rapidly when the pulsar is on than when it is off. [.. the] braking mechanism must be related to the radio emission and the processes creating it and the additional slow-down can be explained by a wind of particles leaving the pulsar's magnetosphere and carrying away rotational energy.
- PSR J1748-2446ad, at 716 Hz, the pulsar with the highest rotation speed.
- PSR J0108-1431, the closest known pulsar to the Earth. It lies in the direction of the constellation Cetus, at a distance of about 85 parsecs (280 light years). Nevertheless, it was not discovered until 1993 due to its extremely low luminosity. It was discovered by the Danish astronomer Thomas Tauris in collaboration with a team of Australian and European astronomers using the Parkes 64-meter radio telescope. The pulsar is 1000 times weaker than an average radio pulsar and thus this pulsar may represent the tip of an iceberg of a population of more than half a million such dim pulsars crowding our Milky Way.
- PSR J1903+0327, a pulsar discovered to be in a binary system with a sun-like star.
Notes
References
- Duncan R. Lorimer, "Binary and Millisecond Pulsars at the New Millennium", Living Rev. Relativity 4, (2001), http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2001-5
- D. R. Lorimer & M. Kramer; Handbook of Pulsar Astronomy; Cambridge Observing Handbooks for Research Astronomers, 2004
- Ingrid H. Stairs, "Testing General Relativity with Pulsar Timing", Living Rev. Relativity 6, (2003): http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2003-5
- Peter A. Sturrock; The UFO Enigma: A New Review of the Physical Evidence; Warner Books, 1999; ISBN 0-446-52565-0
External links
- A Pulsar Discovery - the detection of the first optical pulsar from the American Institute of Physics. Includes audio and teachers guides.
- The Discovery of Pulsars on H2G2
- Interview with Jocelyn Bell-Burnell on the discovery of pulsars (Jodcast) June, 2007 low quality version available
- The listing for the first pulsar (PULS CP 1919) in the Simbad database
- The ATNF Pulsar Catalogue
- Scientists Can Predict Pulsar Starquakes (SpaceDaily) Jun 07, 2006
- List of pulsars in binary systems
- XMM-Newton Makes New Discoveries About Old Pulsars (SpaceDaily) Jul 27, 2006
- Hot New Idea: How Dead Stars Go Cold Ker Than (SPACE.com) 27 July 2006 06:16 am ET
- Animation of pulsar 2008-01-17 01:58:AM MST
See also
pulsar in Arabic: نباض
pulsar in Bosnian: Pulsar
pulsar in Catalan: Púlsar
pulsar in Czech: Pulsar
pulsar in Danish: Pulsar
pulsar in German: Pulsar
pulsar in Modern Greek (1453-): Πάλσαρ
pulsar in Esperanto: Pulsaro
pulsar in Spanish: Pulsar
pulsar in Estonian: Pulsar
pulsar in Persian: تپاختر
pulsar in Finnish: Pulsari
pulsar in French: Pulsar
pulsar in Hebrew: פולסר
pulsar in Croatian: Pulsar
pulsar in Hungarian: Pulzár
pulsar in Ido: Pulsaro
pulsar in Italian: Pulsar
pulsar in Japanese: パルサー
pulsar in Latin: Pulsar
pulsar in Latvian: Pulsārs
pulsar in Lithuanian: Pulsaras
pulsar in Dutch: Pulsar
pulsar in Norwegian: Pulsar
pulsar in Polish: Pulsar
pulsar in Romanian: Pulsar
pulsar in Russian: Пульсар
pulsar in Simple English: Pulsar
pulsar in Slovak: Pulzar
pulsar in Serbian: Пулсар
pulsar in Swedish: Pulsar
pulsar in Turkish: Pulsar
pulsar in Ukrainian: Пульсар
pulsar in Vietnamese: Pulsar
pulsar in Chinese: 脉冲星
pulsar in Portuguese: Estrela de
nêutrons
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Beehive, Cepheid variable,
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, Hyades, Messier catalog, NGC, Pleiades, Seven Sisters,
absolute magnitude, binary star, black hole, double star, dwarf
star, fixed star, giant star, globular cluster, gravity star,
magnitude, main
sequence star, mass-luminosity law, neutron star, nova, open cluster, populations, quasar, quasi-stellar radio
source, radio star, red giant star, relative magnitude, sky atlas,
spectrum-luminosity diagram, star, star catalog, star chart,
star cloud, star cluster, stellar magnitude, supernova, variable star,
white dwarf star