PULSAR

in astronomy, a neutron star that emits brief, sharp pulses of energy instead of the steady radiation associated with other natural sources. The study of pulsars began when Antony Hewish and his students at Cambridge Univ. built a primitive radio telescope to study a scintillation effect on radio sources caused by clouds of electrons in the solar wind. Because this telescope was specially designed to record rapid variations in signals, in 1967 it readily recorded a signal from a totally unexpected source. Jocelyn Bell Burnell noticed a strong scintillation effect opposite the sun, where the effect should have been weak. After an improved recorder was installed, the signals were received again as a series of sharp pulses with intervals of about a second. By the end of 1968 it was clear that the team had discovered a rapidly spinning neutron star, a remnant of a supernova.

In 1974 the first binary pulsar—two stars, at least one of which is a neutron star, that orbit each other—was discovered by Russell A. Hulse and Joseph H. Taylor, for which they shared the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physics. Using this binary system, they observed indirect evidence of gravitational waves and also tested the general theory of relativity. Several dozen binary pulsars are now known. In 1995 the orbiting Compton Gamma Ray Observatory detected the first object that bursts and pulses at the same time. This bursting pulsar, another class of pulsars, is currently the strongest source of X rays and gamma rays in the sky. Fewer than a dozen bursting pulsars are known to exist.

The intense magnetic field and plasma that are believed to surround a neutron star provide an effective source of radio waves. The high-energy electrons of the plasma spiral around the magnetic field and emit radio waves and other forms of electromagnetic radiation. This synchrotron radiation is highly directional, like a flashlight beam. If the neutron star is rotating, it will act like a revolving beacon and produce the observed pulses. The pulses recur at precise intervals, but successive pulses differ considerably in strength. Since 1968 more than 700 pulsars have been observed, with pulse rates from 4 seconds to 1.5 milliseconds; the very rapid ones are called millisecond pulsars. The interval between pulses decreases ever so slightly with the passage of time, and it is believed that the slower pulsers are the older stars while the rapid pulsers are the younger. Pulsars in the Crab Nebula and at the site of the Vela supernova can be detected optically as well as at X-ray and gamma-ray frequencies.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Pulsar  - 184 results

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...Wolszczan, for answers to my questions about pulsar planets, and to the late Clyde Tombaugh...Chapter 4 RIDDLE OF THE PULSAR PLANETS...113 The Pulsar Planet that Almost Was 116...
...permission of Dr David Malin, supplied courtesy of the Anglo-Australian Telescope Board.) Model of a pulsar (p. 239). Model of a binary pulsar (p. 242). Model of our Milky Way galaxy (p. 252). Preface This book grew out of an undergraduate...
...spinning object known to astronomers as a millisecond pulsar. A millisecond pulsar is as different from our sun as it is possible...prevailing view among astronomers was that a millisecond pulsar was the least likely type of star to be accompanied...
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journal articles on: Pulsar  - 19 results

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...1993 Nobel Prize for physics for discovering a binary pulsar. Pulsars are collapsed, rotating stars that emit beacons of electromagnetic...of light. Moreover, the rotational frequency of the pulsar, and thus the timing between their beacons of radiation...
...and manufacturing companies wanting to participate. Indeed, Pulsar, one of Mexicos largest industrial conglomerates, has announced...Operating Income, 1988-93 as % of revenue Telecom Finland, Pulsar estimates that it can provide service to several million customers...
...The final meaning (in this case, the observation of an optical pulsar) is emergent and negotiated. It results from a co ntinuing and...science construed with materials from the optically discovered pulsar. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 11, 131-58. Grice, H.P...
...this novel, McGee reflects upon his watch, a digital Hamilton Pulsar that does not display the time until a button is pressed. In...intrude then; today, the "wristwatch.. keeps needling you.... The Pulsar signalled an attempt to "return to the easier and more relaxing...
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magazine articles on: Pulsar  - 30 results

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A Pulsar on the Move by Charles Liu About once...toward Earth. We call this kind of star a pulsar. You might expect to find a neutron star...remnant. One of these, the Crab Nebula, has a pulsar at its center (spinning thirty-three times...
Ring around the Pulsar: Planets May Form in a Harsh Environment...particular core, known as an anomalous X-ray pulsar, broadcasts X rays of high intensity...report in the April 6 Nature. Although pulsars emit large amounts of high-energy radiation...
...him his good friend Alfonso Romo, whose Pulsar corporate empire includes brokerage houses...are mentioned in a company prospectus), Pulsar proposes large-scale junk tree plantations...thousands of disgruntled indigenous people. Pulsar already projects enormous plantations...
...radio emissions from a compact millisecond pulsar star situated 1,300 light-years from Earth...inhabitant of the Virgo constellation. A pulsar is a tiny ball, perhaps 12 miles in diameter...squashed into a volume the size of a grape. Pulsars have a density of 10.sup.15 grams per...
...rotates; we call such a neutron star a pulsar. Following their discovery, in 1968, several hundred such pulsars have been detected. Where mass determinations...electric charge. More about these "invisible pulsars" in a moment. Quite a number of pulsars...
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newspaper articles on: Pulsar  - 82 results

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...Equestrian World: Trevor in Line for Pounds 1m Pulsar Bonus. by Ruth Loney Above...Der Grose Preis von Aachen part of the Pulsar Crown Series. Now Trevor stands to win...Eros and lost her $600,000 bonus from Pulsar having won the Monterrey Grand Prix last...
Equestrian Briefing. John Whitakers search for the pounds 500,000 bonus in the Pulsar GP in Valkenswaard ended on Sunday when he and Welham finished 7th. Jan Tops won the Grand Prix on home ground with Top Gun La...
...the world championships. Monterrey in Mexico, home of the Pulsar Crown has put in a strong bid for the showjumping championships which cannot be ignored by the FEI since they need Pulsar after Volvo end their world cup series next year. It Mexico...
...before taking a 650 brakehorsepower Nissan Skyline, a customised Nissan Pulsar and a Mazda RX-7. The criminals took the R32 GTR Skyline to its 220mph...Hospital, in Bristol, while the Mazda was dumped in Gloucester. The Pulsar is still missing.
...watch? FURTHER to the earlier answer, Pulsar is short for pulsating star, and was at first the name of the watch. Today, Pulsar flourishes under Seiko. Hamilton...and it became the prototype for the Pulsar wristwatch, which the maker presented...
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encyclopedia articles on: Pulsar  - 8 results

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PULSAR in astronomy, a neutron star that emits brief, sharp...radiation associated with other natural sources. The study of pulsars began when Antony Hewish and his students at Cambridge...a remnant of a supernova . In 1974 the first binary pulsar two stars, at least one of which is a neutron star, that...
...astronomers detected three planets orbiting a pulsar ; however, because pulsars are not normal stars, this was not considered a...the spectrum of light coming from the star. In pulsar timing, planets orbiting a pulsar can be detected...
...good conditions. The nebula is also a strong emitter of X rays. At its center is a pulsar , PSR 0531+21, that spins 30 times per second. The youngest pulsar observed, it gives off radiation at radio, optical, ultraviolet, X-ray, and gammay ray...
...general theory of relativity and would be analogous to electromagnetic waves, comes from astronomical observations of a binary pulsar designated 1913 + 16. The rate at which the two neutron stars in the binary rotate around each other is changing in a manner...
...630 mi (30,000 km) per sec. After the supernova explosion, there remains a small, hot neutron star , possibly visible as a pulsar , surrounded by an expanding cloud, such as that seen in the Crab Nebula . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
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