Andrew Yee[_1_]
March 27th 08, 06:09 AM
Robert Naeye / Rob Gutro
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. February 21, 2008
301-286-4453/4044
PRESS RELEASE: 08-12
POWERFUL EXPLOSIONS SUGGEST NEUTRON STAR MISSING LINK
GREENBELT, Md. -- Observations from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
(RXTE) have revealed that the youngest known pulsing neutron star has thrown
a temper tantrum. The collapsed star occasionally unleashes powerful bursts
of X-rays, which are forcing astronomers to rethink the life cycle of
neutron stars.
"We are watching one type of neutron star literally change into another
right before our very eyes. This is a long-sought missing link between
different types of pulsars," says Fotis Gavriil of NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Gavriil is lead author of a paper in the February 21 issue of Sciencexpress.
A neutron star forms when a massive star explodes as a supernova, leaving
behind an ultradense core. Most known neutron stars emit regular pulsations
that are powered by rapid spins. Astronomers have found nearly 1,800 of
these so-called pulsars in our galaxy. Pulsars have incredibly strong
magnetic fields by Earthly standards, but a dozen of them -- slow rotators
known as magnetars -- actually derive their energy from incredibly powerful
magnetic fields, the strongest known in the universe. These fields can
stress the neutron star's solid crust past the breaking point, triggering
starquakes that snap magnetic-field lines, producing violent and sporadic
X-ray bursts.
But what is the evolutionary relationship between pulsars and magnetars?
Astronomers would like to know if magnetars represent a rare class of
pulsars, or if some or all pulsars go through a magnetar phase during their
life cycles.
Gavriil and his colleagues have found an important clue by examining
archival RXTE data of a young neutron star, known as PSR J1846-0258 for its
sky coordinates in the constellation Aquila. Previously, astronomers had
classified PSR J1846 as a normal pulsar because of its fast spin (3.1 times
per second) and pulsar-like spectrum. But RXTE caught four magnetar-like
X-ray bursts on May 31, 2006, and another on July 27, 2006. Although none of
these events lasted longer than 0.14 second, they all packed the wallop of
at least 75,000 Suns. "Never before has a regular pulsar been observed to
produce magnetar bursts," says Gavriil.
"Young, fast-spinning pulsars were not thought to have enough magnetic
energy to generate such powerful bursts," says coauthor Marjorie Gonzalez,
who worked on this paper at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, but who
is now based at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. "Here's a
normal pulsar that's acting like a magnetar."
Observations from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory also provided key
information. Chandra observed the neutron star in October 2000 and again in
June 2006, around the time of the bursts. Chandra showed the object had
brightened in X-rays, confirming that the bursts were from the pulsar, and
that its spectrum had changed to become more magnetar-like.
Astronomers know that PSR J1846 is very young for several reasons. First, it
resides inside a supernova remnant known as Kes 75, an indicator that it
hasn't had time to wander from its birthplace. Second, based on the rapidity
that its spin rate is slowing down, astronomers calculate that it can be no
older than 884 years -- an infant on the cosmic timescale. Magnetars are
thought to be about 10,000 years old, whereas most pulsars are thought to be
considerably older.
The fact that PSR J1846's spin rate is slowing down relatively fast also
means that it has a strong magnetic field that is braking the rotation. The
implied magnetic field is trillions of times stronger than Earth's field,
but it's 10 to 100 times weaker than typical magnetar field strengths.
Coauthor Victoria
Kaspi of McGill University notes, "PSR J1846's actual magnetic field could
be much stronger than the measured amount, suggesting that many young
neutron stars classified as pulsars might actually be magnetars in disguise,
and that the true strength of their magnetic field only reveals itself over
thousands of years as they ramp up in activity."
For related images to this story, please visit on the Web:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2008/magnetar_hybrid.html
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. February 21, 2008
301-286-4453/4044
PRESS RELEASE: 08-12
POWERFUL EXPLOSIONS SUGGEST NEUTRON STAR MISSING LINK
GREENBELT, Md. -- Observations from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
(RXTE) have revealed that the youngest known pulsing neutron star has thrown
a temper tantrum. The collapsed star occasionally unleashes powerful bursts
of X-rays, which are forcing astronomers to rethink the life cycle of
neutron stars.
"We are watching one type of neutron star literally change into another
right before our very eyes. This is a long-sought missing link between
different types of pulsars," says Fotis Gavriil of NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Gavriil is lead author of a paper in the February 21 issue of Sciencexpress.
A neutron star forms when a massive star explodes as a supernova, leaving
behind an ultradense core. Most known neutron stars emit regular pulsations
that are powered by rapid spins. Astronomers have found nearly 1,800 of
these so-called pulsars in our galaxy. Pulsars have incredibly strong
magnetic fields by Earthly standards, but a dozen of them -- slow rotators
known as magnetars -- actually derive their energy from incredibly powerful
magnetic fields, the strongest known in the universe. These fields can
stress the neutron star's solid crust past the breaking point, triggering
starquakes that snap magnetic-field lines, producing violent and sporadic
X-ray bursts.
But what is the evolutionary relationship between pulsars and magnetars?
Astronomers would like to know if magnetars represent a rare class of
pulsars, or if some or all pulsars go through a magnetar phase during their
life cycles.
Gavriil and his colleagues have found an important clue by examining
archival RXTE data of a young neutron star, known as PSR J1846-0258 for its
sky coordinates in the constellation Aquila. Previously, astronomers had
classified PSR J1846 as a normal pulsar because of its fast spin (3.1 times
per second) and pulsar-like spectrum. But RXTE caught four magnetar-like
X-ray bursts on May 31, 2006, and another on July 27, 2006. Although none of
these events lasted longer than 0.14 second, they all packed the wallop of
at least 75,000 Suns. "Never before has a regular pulsar been observed to
produce magnetar bursts," says Gavriil.
"Young, fast-spinning pulsars were not thought to have enough magnetic
energy to generate such powerful bursts," says coauthor Marjorie Gonzalez,
who worked on this paper at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, but who
is now based at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. "Here's a
normal pulsar that's acting like a magnetar."
Observations from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory also provided key
information. Chandra observed the neutron star in October 2000 and again in
June 2006, around the time of the bursts. Chandra showed the object had
brightened in X-rays, confirming that the bursts were from the pulsar, and
that its spectrum had changed to become more magnetar-like.
Astronomers know that PSR J1846 is very young for several reasons. First, it
resides inside a supernova remnant known as Kes 75, an indicator that it
hasn't had time to wander from its birthplace. Second, based on the rapidity
that its spin rate is slowing down, astronomers calculate that it can be no
older than 884 years -- an infant on the cosmic timescale. Magnetars are
thought to be about 10,000 years old, whereas most pulsars are thought to be
considerably older.
The fact that PSR J1846's spin rate is slowing down relatively fast also
means that it has a strong magnetic field that is braking the rotation. The
implied magnetic field is trillions of times stronger than Earth's field,
but it's 10 to 100 times weaker than typical magnetar field strengths.
Coauthor Victoria
Kaspi of McGill University notes, "PSR J1846's actual magnetic field could
be much stronger than the measured amount, suggesting that many young
neutron stars classified as pulsars might actually be magnetars in disguise,
and that the true strength of their magnetic field only reveals itself over
thousands of years as they ramp up in activity."
For related images to this story, please visit on the Web:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2008/magnetar_hybrid.html