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XMM-Newton:
pulsed heartbeat of a weird new type of star
Friday, December 21, 2007
An
artist's impression of a Rotating Radio Transient.
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Credits:
Russel Kightly Media
XMM-Newton has detected
periodic X-ray emission, or the pulsed heartbeat of a weird new
type of star. Collecting the X-rays from the so-called rotating
radio transient has confirmed the nature of the underlying
celestial object and given astronomers a new insight into these
exotic objects. The observations were made using
XMM-Newton’s European Photon Imaging Camera (EPIC), which
targeted the celestial object RRAT J1819–1458. Astronomers
observed the object for around 12 hours and detected pulsations
in the X-ray data that show the source to be rotating once every
4.26 seconds.
Previously, astronomers had
only seen radio outbursts from this object. It erupts every three
minutes or so with a brief burst of radio emission lasting just 3
milliseconds. Such behavior defines the object as a rotating
radio transient (RRAT).
The RRATs were announced in
February 2006. Eleven objects were found using the Parkes radio
telescope. Astronomers suspected that RRATs were neutron stars,
the compact remnants of dead stars made of neutrons and measuring
just 10–12 km across yet containing more matter than the
Sun. They are therefore extremely dense. Most observed neutron
stars are radio pulsars; rotating quickly and sweeping lighthouse
beams of radiation across space that make them appear to pulsate.
The RRATs, however, were only detected through their radio
bursts.
The new XMM-Newton observations
show that periodic emission, linked to the object’s
rotation, can be detected in X-rays. “It is now definite
that RRATs are rotating neutron stars as we can see the
4.26-second rotation period of the RRAT in the X-ray data,”
says Maura McLaughlin, West Virginia University, USA, who took
the lead in the research.
In addition to the
identification of the underlying celestial object from the
discovery of the X-ray pulsations, XMM-Newton also revealed
another facet of the RRAT’s behavior. Something appears to
be absorbing certain frequencies of the X-rays after they are
emitted from the surface of the neutron star.
The absorption could either be
happening in an atmosphere of gases surrounding the neutron star
or by particles trapped in the neutron star’s magnetic
field. If the second reason is the cause of the absorption, it
would indicate that the magnetic field of this RRAT is strong.
“We can’t say for
sure where the absorption is coming from with these
observations,” says Nanda Rea, University of Amsterdam,
Netherlands. She estimates that an observation twice as long
would collect enough data to determine where the absorption is
taking place.
She also hopes to follow-up
this observation by targeting other RRATs. Before that can
happen, however, the team must refine the positions they have for
these objects. To do this, they continue to observe the RRATs
with radio telescopes across the world, timing the outbursts.
From careful measurements of the arrival times of the bursts over
the course of the year, their positions in the sky can be
determined more accurately. Once these locations are known, X-ray
telescopes can be pointed in their direction.
Since the original discovery of
11 RRATs, McLaughlin’s team has found an additional 10.
This indicates that they may form a substantial population in the
Milky Way, with over 100 000 of them dotted around our galaxy.
Source:
ESA

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