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Astronomers Find Brightest Pulsar Ever Observed 70

An anonymous reader writes: Astronomers using the Chandra X-ray Observatory and the NuSTAR satellite have discovered a pulsar so bright that it challenges how scientists think pulsars work. While observing galaxy M82 in hopes of spotting supernovae, the researchers found an unexpected source of X-rays very close to the galaxy's core. It was near another source, thought to be a black hole. But the new one was pulsing, which black holes don't do. The trouble is that according to known pulsar models, it's about 100 times brighter than the calculated limits to its luminosity (abstract). Researchers used a different method to figure out its mass, and the gap shrank, but it's still too bright to fit their theories.
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Astronomers Find Brightest Pulsar Ever Observed

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  • Maybe they have stumbled upon some new type of star or object. There are probably all kinds of large things that we have never run across before.
    • My hypothesis is how black holes often work like a gravitational lens for light, they could be located in the right spot that in essence focuses the xray energy right onto our location.

      • My hypothesis is how black holes often work like a gravitational lens for light, they could be located in the right spot that in essence focuses the xray energy right onto our location.

        Actually, something like that is in the story if you read it. It's a pulsar and the magnetic fields of which can lens the light just as you describe. No blackhole required.

    • Over a certain size, pretty much everything becomes some kind of star. Technically, even a blackhole is a star.

    • Maybe they have stumbled upon some new type of star or object. There are probably all kinds of large things that we have never run across before.

      I think that's unlikely. We've seen all there is to see, we know all there is to know.

      ...about 100 times brighter than the calculated limits of its luminosity..."

      Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.

      - Arthur Conan Doyle

      Thus, quote obviously, the object is actually 100 pulsars in close proximity and with their pulses synced, appearing as one bright pulsar. No need to thank me, astronmers.

  • The obvious reason for such a beam is some alien kid playing with his xray toy pointer.
    That, or possibly theoretical models that put 95% of stuff into not yet observed dark matter/dark energy are still a bit immature.

  • by steelfood ( 895457 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2014 @02:10PM (#48205421)

    "Look at that star! It's so bright, like it's pointed straight at us! That can't be ri--"

  • love. it. one hundred times brighter seems pretty bright but i bet i could hold the pulsar directly up to my eye and still be pretty much somewhat possibly okay for the most part. perhaps.

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

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