Pulsars are the rotating remnants of massive stars, which sweep the cosmos with narrow beams of radiation as they spin. When an observer — in our case, Earth — is in line with these beams, we receive a radio “blip” from the pulsar each time its pole rotates into our field of view. These cosmic lighthouses can serve as extremely accurate clocks and, as recent tests have determined, excellent
navigational tools.
But these exotic objects remain mysterious. Composed entirely of neutrons held up by the quantum mechanical principle that these particles cannot be compressed further, neutron stars are tiny in comparison with not only the average star, but also with Earth. Containing about 1.4 solar masses, these stellar corpses aren’t even as long as the largest dimension of Manhattan Island. But now, a team of astronomers has observed one of these extreme objects in unprecedented detail, spotting two regions of radiation only 12 miles (20 kilometers) apart around a neutron star sitting 6,500 light-years away. According to the study’s
press release, that’s the equivalent of — without leaving Earth — seeing a flea on the surface of Pluto.
Their work, led by University of Toronto Ph.D. student Robert Main, was published today in
Nature. The observation was made possible because of the particular system under scrutiny, which contains the pulsar B1957+20 and a brown dwarf, or failed star. B1957+20 is a “black widow” pulsar, which steals gas from its (in this case, sub)stellar companion, ultimately destroying it just as a black widow spider devours its mate. It spins more than 600 times a second, and previous studies indicate it may be one of the most massive pulsars ever discovered.
In this particular system, the brown dwarf, which is only about a third the diameter of our Sun, trails a wake of gas like a comet as it orbits B1957+20 at just 5 times the distance of the Moon from Earth. It is this gas that made the observation possible: “The gas is acting as like a magnifying glass right in front of the pulsar,” said Main. “We are essentially looking at the pulsar through a naturally occurring magnifier which periodically allows us to see the two regions [of radiation] separately.” These two regions are associated with two “hotspots” on the pulsar’s surface, which are in turn associated with its intense, lighthouse-like beams.