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New star may answer universe’s mysteries

A perplexing fast-spinning star just might be the “missing link” in a long-standing pulsar mystery, scientists say. The so-called neutron star — a city-sized stellar remnant born from the explosive death of a larger star — is located about 18,000 light-years from Earth has the never-before-observed ability to change from one kind of pulsar to another and back again. You can watch a video animation of the pulsar here set to the music of rock band Atom Strange. Pulsars are rapidly spinning neutron stars that come in different varieties, but scientists could not pin down the relationship between two kinds of pulsars until now. “For the first time we see both X-rays and extremely fast radio pulses from the one pulsar,” said Simon Johnston, head of astrophysics at the Sydney, Australia-based Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) astronomy and space science division, in a statement. “This is the first direct evidence of a pulsar changing from one kind of object into another — like a caterpillar turning into a butterfly.” The pulsar (named PSR J1824-2452I) spews out x-rays or radio pulses depending on how much matter its companion star is shooting in its direction at any given time, scientists have found. The companion star — that only has about one-fifth the mass of the sun — sometimes pounds the pulsar with speeding streams of matter. Scientists found that the pulsar’s magnetic field can protect the star from the onslaught of stellar material, but sometimes it becomes overwhelmed by the intensity of the steams. When the magnetic field can no longer stop the matter from reaching the surface of the pulsar, the spinning star shoots out jets of x-rays. Eventually, the pulsar’s magnetic field starts protecting the star again after the companion star has settled down. “We’ve been fortunate enough to see all stages of this process, with a range of ground and space telescopes,” Alessandro Papitto, astronomer and lead author of a study detailing the new findings in the journal Nature this week, said in a statement. “We’ve been looking for such evidence for more than a decade.”

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