A team of astronomers from the UK, USA, Australia, Italy and Canada using the CSIRO Parkes radio telescope in eastern Australia has found a new kind of cosmic object - small, compressed ’neutron stars’ that show no activity most of the time but once in a while spit out a single burst of radio waves. The discovery is published in this week’s issue of the journal Nature.
The new objects - dubbed Rotating Radio Transients or RRATs - are likely to be related to conventional radio pulsars (small stars that emit regular pulses of radio waves, up to hundreds of times a second). But the new objects probably far outnumber their old cousins, the scientists say.
Eleven RRATs have been found, first detected by the Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey and then observed again several times. Their isolated bursts last for between two and 30 milliseconds. In between, for times ranging from four minutes to three hours, they are silent.
"These things were very difficult to pin down," says CSIRO’s Dr Dick Manchester, a member of the research team and a veteran pulsar hunter. "For each object we’ve been detecting radio emission for less than one second a day. And because these are single bursts, we’ve had to take great care to distinguish them from terrestrial radio interference."
By analysing the burst arrival times, the astronomers have found that 10 of the 11 sources have underlying periods of between 0.4 seconds and seven seconds. It is this that suggests that they are rotating neutron stars.
Because RRATs are ’silent’ most of the time, the chance of being able to detect one is low. Many more must lurk unseen in our Galaxy, the astronomers argue - perhaps a few hundred thousand. The number of ’normal’ radio pulsars in our Galaxy is estimated to be about 100 000.
Unlike some other kinds of stars that show periodic eruptions, the RRATs show no evidence for being in binary systems (that is, each orbiting another star).
A handful of ’normal’ pulsars produce the occasional ’giant’ pulse, along with their usual train of regular, smaller pulses. The RRATs appear to differ from these pulsars by having magnetic field strengths in the emission region about a hundred thousand times weaker.
Helen Sim | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.aao.gov.au
More articles from Physics and Astronomy:
Quantum gas microscope offers glimpse of quirky ultracold atoms
06.11.2009 | Harvard University
Carbon Atmosphere Discovered on Neutron Star
06.11.2009 | Chandra X-ray Observatory
Airborne nitrogen shifts aquatic nutrient limitation in pristine lakes
06.11.2009 | Studies and Analyses
Genome sequence for the domestic horse to be unveiled
06.11.2009 | Life Sciences
06.11.2009 | Earth Sciences
Texas Tech University Hosts Major Textile Conference in India
06.11.2009 | Event News
Brief Highlights of the Fluid Dynamics Conference, Minneapolis
30.10.2009 | Event News
EUROSAFE Forum 2009 Brussels: "Safety Implications of an Increased Demand for Nuclear Energy"
29.10.2009 | Event News