Swift Reveals New Phenomenon in a Neutron Star

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bystander
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Swift Reveals New Phenomenon in a Neutron Star

Post by bystander » Thu May 30, 2013 6:59 am

Swift Reveals New Phenomenon in a Neutron Star
NASA | GSFC | Swift | 2013 May 29
[attachment=0]CTB109.jpg[/attachment]
Astronomers using NASA's Swift X-ray Telescope have observed a spinning neutron star suddenly slowing down, yielding clues they can use to understand these extremely dense objects.

A neutron star is the crushed core of a massive star that ran out of fuel, collapsed under its own weight, and exploded as a supernova. A neutron star can spin as fast as 43,000 times per minute and boast a magnetic field a trillion times stronger than Earth's. Matter within a neutron star is so dense a teaspoonful would weigh about a billion tons on Earth.

This neutron star, 1E 2259+586, is located about 10,000 light-years away toward the constellation Cassiopeia. It is one of about two dozen neutron stars called magnetars, which have very powerful magnetic fields and occasionally produce high-energy explosions or pulses.

Observations of X-ray pulses from 1E 2259+586 from July 2011 through mid-April 2012 indicated the magnetar's rotation was gradually slowing from once every seven seconds, or about eight revolutions per minute. On April 28, 2012, data showed the spin rate had decreased abruptly, by 2.2 millionths of a second, and the magnetar was spinning down at a faster rate.

"Astronomers have witnessed hundreds of events, called glitches, associated with sudden increases in the spin of neutron stars, but this sudden spin-down caught us off guard," said Victoria Kaspi, a professor of physics at McGill University in Montreal. She leads a team that uses Swift to monitor magnetars routinely.

Astronomers dubbed the event an "anti-glitch," said co-author Neil Gehrels, principal investigator of the Swift mission at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "It affected the magnetar in exactly the opposite manner of every other clearly identified glitch seen in neutron stars."

The discovery has important implications for understanding the extreme physical conditions present within neutron stars, where matter becomes squeezed to densities several times greater than an atomic nucleus. No laboratory on Earth can duplicate these conditions.

A report on the findings appears in the May 30 edition of the journal Nature.

The internal structure of neutron stars is a long-standing puzzle. Current theory maintains a neutron star has a crust made up of electrons and ions; an interior containing oddities that include a neutron superfluid, which is a bizarre state of matter without friction; and a surface that accelerates streams of high-energy particles through the star's intense magnetic field.

The streaming particles drain energy from the crust. The crust spins down, but the fluid interior resists being slowed. The crust fractures under the strain. When this happens, a glitch occurs. There is an X-ray outburst and the star gets a speedup kick from the faster-spinning interior.

Processes that lead to a sudden rotational slowdown constitute a new theoretical challenge.

On April 21, 2012, just a week before Swift observed the anti-glitch, 1E 2259+586 produced a brief, but intense X-ray burst detected by the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor aboard NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. The scientists think this 36-millisecond eruption of high-energy light likely signaled the changes that drove the magnetar's slowdown.

"What is really remarkable about this event is the combination of the magnetar's abrupt slowdown, the X-ray outburst, and the fact we now observe the star spinning down at a faster rate than before," said lead author Robert Archibald, a graduate student at McGill.

Super-dense Star is First Ever Found Suddenly Slowing Its Spin
Penn State University | Eberly College of Science | 2013 May 29

A New Kind of Cosmic Glitch
McGill University | 2013 May 29

Suddenly Slowing Star Could Give Hints Of Its Interior
Universe Today | Elizabeth Howell | 2013 May 29

An anti-glitch in a magnetar - R. F. Archibald et al
Attachments
The magnetar 1E 2259+586 shines a brilliant blue-white in this false<br />color X-ray image of the CTB 109 supernova remnant, which lies about <br />10,000 light-years away toward the constellation Cassiopeia. CTB 109 <br />is only one of three supernova remnants in our galaxy known to harbor <br />a magnetar. X-rays at low, medium and high energies are respectively <br />shown in red, green, and blue in this image created from observations <br />acquired by the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite in 2002.<br />Credit: ESA/XMM-Newton/M. Sasaki et al.
The magnetar 1E 2259+586 shines a brilliant blue-white in this false
color X-ray image of the CTB 109 supernova remnant, which lies about
10,000 light-years away toward the constellation Cassiopeia. CTB 109
is only one of three supernova remnants in our galaxy known to harbor
a magnetar. X-rays at low, medium and high energies are respectively
shown in red, green, and blue in this image created from observations
acquired by the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite in 2002.
Credit: ESA/XMM-Newton/M. Sasaki et al.
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MargaritaMc
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Re: Swift Reveals New Phenomenon in a Neutron Star

Post by MargaritaMc » Thu May 30, 2013 10:47 am

the fact we now observe the star spinning down at a faster rate than before,"
I found this difficult to understand, probably because I was not familiar with the term "spinning down at a faster rate".

But it was clarified by this:
Penn State astronomer Jamie Kennea, a coauthor of the Nature paper. "This neutron star is doing something completely unexpected. Its speed of rotation has been dropping at an increasingly rapid rate ever since the initial sudden decrease in its spin."
http://science.psu.edu/news-and-events/ ... nnea5-2013
from a link posted above by bystander.

I post it just in case others were also puzzled. :ssmile:
Margarita
"In those rare moments of total quiet with a dark sky, I again feel the awe that struck me as a child. The feeling is utterly overwhelming as my mind races out across the stars. I feel peaceful and serene."
&mdash; Dr Debra M. Elmegreen, Fellow of the AAAS

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Re: Swift Reveals New Phenomenon in a Neutron Star

Post by neufer » Thu May 30, 2013 1:52 pm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glitch wrote: <<A glitch is a short-lived fault in a system. It is often used to describe a transient fault that corrects itself, and is therefore difficult to troubleshoot. Some reference books, including Random House's American Slang, claim it comes from the German word glitschen ("to slip") and the Yiddish word gletshn ("to slide or skid"). Either way it is a relatively new term. So new, in fact, that on July 23, 1965, Time Magazine felt it necessary to define it in an article: "Glitches—a spaceman's word for irritating disturbances." In relation to the reference by Time Magazine, the term has been believed to enter common usage during the American Space Race of the 1950s, where it was used to describe minor faults in the rocket hardware that were difficult to pinpoint. In 1962 during the American space program by John Glenn explained, "Literally, a glitch is a spike or change in voltage in an electrical current."

Glitch art is the aestheticization of digital or analog errors, such as artifacts and other "bugs", by either corrupting digital code/data or by physically manipulating electronic devices (for example by circuit bending).>>
Glitch Art Neuendorffer

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