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The above graphic illustrates how the double pulsar works. As pulsars A and B orbit each other, their attractions at times cause A to illuminate B, increasing the brightness of B.
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Published Paper Probes Pulsar Pair
April 28, 2004
The only known gravitationally bound pair of pulsars -- extremely
dense, spinning stars that beam radio waves -- may be pirouetting
around each other in an intricate dance.
"Pulsars are intriguing and puzzling objects. They pack as much mass
as the Sun crammed into an object with a cross-sectional area about
as large as Boston," said Fredrick Jenet of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. Jenet and Scott Ransom of McGill
University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, have developed a theoretical
model to explain the behavior of this one-of-a-kind set of pulsars.
"The physics of radio pulsar emission has eluded researchers for
more than three decades," Jenet said. "This system may be the
'Rosetta stone' of radio pulsars, and this model is one step toward
its translation."
The research appears in the April 29 issue of the journal Nature.
Jenet and Ransom studied the recently-discovered double pulsar
system, in which two spinning pulsars orbit each other.
The discovery of the two-star system, officially named PSR J0737-
3039B, was announced in 2003 by a multinational team of researchers
from Italy, Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Those researchers proposed that the duo contained one spinning
pulsar and a neutron star. Later in 2003, scientists working at the
Parkes Observatory in New South Wales, Australia, determined that
both stars are actually pulsars. This discovery marked the first
known example of a "binary," or double, pulsar system. The stars are
referred to as A and B.
Pulsars emit high-intensity radio radiation into a narrow beam. As
the pulsar rotates, this beam moves in and out of our line of sight.
Hence, we see periodic bursts of radio radiation. In this sense, a
pulsar works like a lighthouse, in which the light may be on all the
time, but it appears to blink on and off. Scientists were surprised
to find that the B pulsar is on only at certain locations in its
orbit. "It's as though something is turning B on and off," Jenet
said.
According to Jenet and Ransom, this "something" is closely related
to the radio emission beam emanating from the A pulsar. They believe
that B becomes bright when it is illuminated by emission from A.
Jenet and Ransom used Einstein's Theory of General Relativity to
predict the future evolution of this pulsar system. The theory
implies that gravitational effects will change the emission pattern
of A, which will then alter the exact orbital locations where B
becomes bright.
The double pulsar system is located about 2,000 light years, or 10
million billion miles, from Earth. Jenet and Ransom based their
research on observations made at the Green Bank Telescope in West
Virginia.