An
international team of scientists from the UK, Australia, Italy
and the USA have announced in today's issue of the journal
Science Express (8th January 2004) the first discovery of a
double pulsar system.
They have shown that the compact object orbiting
the 23-millisecond pulsar PSR J0737-3039A with a period of
just 2.4 hours is not only, as suspected, another neutron star
but is also a detectable pulsar, PSR J0737-3039B, that is
rotating once every 2.8 seconds.
Professor Andrew Lyne of the University of
Manchester points out that "While experiments on one pulsar in
such an extreme system as this are exciting enough, the
discovery of two pulsars orbiting one another opens up new
precision tests of general relativity and the probing of
pulsar magnetospheres."
The same team previously reported [Nature 4th
December 2003], the discovery of pulsar A in a close binary
system which is rapidly losing energy by gravitational
radiation. The stars will coalesce in only approximately 85
million years, sending a ripple of gravity waves across the
Universe. The discovery of the system shows that such
coalescences will occur more frequently than previously
thought. "The news has been welcomed by gravitational wave
hunters, since it boosts their hopes for detecting the
gravitational waves" says Prof. Nichi D'Amico of Cagliari
University.
The double neutron star system was first
detected using the 64-m Parkes radio telescope in New South
Wales, Australia. Subsequent observations were made both at
Parkes and with the 76-m Lovell Telescope of the University of
Manchester in Cheshire, UK and revealed the occasional
presence of pulsations with a period of 2.8 seconds from the
companion pulsar.
Already, four different effects beyond those
explained with simple Newtonian gravity have been measured and
are completely consistent with Albert Einstein's theory. Dr.
Richard Manchester of the Australia Telescope National
Facility says, "The fact that both objects are pulsars enables
completely new high-precision tests of gravitational theories.
This system is really extreme." Future observations of the two
stars will measure their slow spiral in towards each other as
they radiate gravitational radiation -- a dance of death
leading to their ultimate fusion into what may become a black
hole. General relativity predicts that the two stars will
slowly wobble like spinning tops allowing new tests of the
theory.
Another unique aspect of the new system is the
strong interaction between radiation from the two stars. By
chance, the orbit is seen nearly edge on to us, and the signal
from one pulsar is eclipsed by the other. Dr. Andrea Possenti
of Cagliari Astronomical Observatory says, "This provides us
with a wonderful opportunity to probe the physical conditions
of a pulsar's outer atmosphere, something we've never been
able to do before."
The surveys designed by the team to discover new
pulsars at the Parkes Telescope have been extraordinarily
successful. They have discovered over 700 pulsars in the last
5 years, nearly as many as were discovered in the preceding 30
years. The discovery of this double pulsar system will be the
major jewel in the crown.
Publication
A.G. Lyne, M. Burgay, M. Kramer, A. Possenti,
R.N. Manchester, F. Camilo, M.A. McLaughlin, D.R. Lorimer, N.
D'Amico, B.C. Joshi, J. Reynolds and P.C.C. Freire. "A
Double-Pulsar System - A Rare Laboratory for Relativistic
Gravity and Plasma Physics". Science 8 January 2004.
Background information
A pulsar is the collapsed core of a massive star
that has ended its life in a supernova explosion. Weighing
more than our Sun, yet only 20 kilometres across, these
incredibly dense objects produce beams of radio waves which
sweep round the sky like a lighthouse, often hundreds of times
a second. Radio telescopes receive a regular train of pulses
as the beam repeatedly crosses the Earth so the objects are
observed as a pulsating radio signal.
Pulsars make exceptional clocks, which enable a
number of unique astronomical experiments. Some very old
pulsars, which have been "spun up" to speeds of over 600
rotations per second by material flowing onto them from a
companion star, appear to be rotating so smoothly that they
may even "keep time" more accurately than the best atomic
clocks here on Earth. Very precise timing observations of
systems in which a pulsar is in orbit around another neutron
star have been able to prove the existence of gravitational
radiation as predicted by Albert Einstein and have provided
very sensitive tests of his theory of General Relativity --
the theory of gravitation which supplanted that of Isaac
Newton. The neutron star binary system reported in this paper
is one of these systems, with an orbit which is decaying more
rapidly than any previously discovered.
The Parkes survey using a multi-beam system that
led to the discovery of the double-pulsar system is an
international collaboration of a team of astronomers from the
UK, Australia, Italy and the USA. The researchers have been
surveying our Galaxy, the Milky Way, for new radio pulsars
using the 64-metre Parkes Radio Telescope in New South Wales,
Australia. The powerful new "multibeam" receiver was built as
a joint venture between engineers at the Australia Telescope
National Facility and the University of Manchester's Jodrell
Bank Observatory, funded by the Particle Physics and Astronomy
Research Council.
The receiver gives the telescope 13 beams
capable of scanning the sky simultaneously and, as Professor
Andrew Lyne of the University of Manchester explained, "It's
like having over a dozen giant radio telescopes operating at
once". As a result, the system requires 13 sets of
sophisticated data acquisition systems, one for each beam,
which were largely developed and built by the UK group.
Following initial detection at Parkes, confirmation and
follow-up observations for many of the new pulsars are made
with the 76-metre Lovell Radio Telescope at Jodrell Bank. The
main processing of the survey in which the PSR J0737-3039
system was discovered was conducted on a cluster of computers
at Cagliari Astronomical Observatory.
Images and Animations
More images and animations representing this
system can be found at http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/research/pulsar/doublepulsar/
[Image and animation 1:
* Web Images (JPG, ~40KB) http://www.atnf.csiro.au/news/press/neutron_binary/images_3/anim2_0475.JPG
* Broadcast Images (TIFF, broadcast quality) ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/PulsarsEvolutionTIFFS/
* Web (MPEG2 320x256, 5MB)
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/news/press/double_pulsar/mpegs/PulsarsEvolution320x256.mpg
* PAL (MPEG2, 29MB)
ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/BroadcastPAL/PulsarsEvolutionPAL.mpg
* NTSC (MPEG2, 24MB)
ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/BroadcastNTSC/PulsarsEvolutionNTSC.mpg
]
Formation of the double pulsar system. The
first-formed pulsar is 'spun up' to become a rapidly rotating
'millisecond pulsar' by matter accreting from its red giant
companion.
Evolution animation: How the double pulsar
system formed. The double pulsar probably formed from a pair
of massive stars orbiting each other. (This animation does not
show the orbital motion.) The more massive star ended its life
first, swelling to become a red giant and then exploding as a
supernova, its core forming a pulsar. The second star entered
the red giant phase later: when it did, matter from this star
was transferred onto its pulsar companion, spinning that up to
become a fast-rotating "millisecond" pulsar. The red giant
then went supernova, forming the second, slower, pulsar.
Animation: John Rowe Animation
[Image and animation 2:
* Web Images (JPG, ~40KB) http://www.atnf.csiro.au/news/press/double_pulsar/images/
* Broadcast Images (TIFF, broadcast quality) ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/PulsarsCurrentTIFFS/
* Web (MPEG2 320x256, 3MB) http://www.atnf.csiro.au/news/press/double_pulsar/mpegs/PulsarsCurrent320x256.mpg
* PAL (MPEG2, 20MB)
ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/BroadcastPAL/PulsarsCurrentPAL.mpg
* NTSC (MPEG2, 17MB)
ftp://ftp.atnf.csiro.au/pub/people/wri192/double_pulsar/BroadcastNTSC/PulsarsCurrentNTSC.mpg]
Current state of the double pulsar system.
Animation: John Rowe Animation
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