NASA’s NICER Reveals 1st-ever Pulsar Surface Map

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Scientists have reached a new frontier in our understanding of pulsars, the dense, whirling remains of exploded stars, thanks to observations from NASA’s Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER). Data from this X-ray telescope aboard the International Space Station has produced the first precise and dependable measurements of both a pulsar’s size and its mass.

The pulsar in question, J0030+0451 (J0030 for short), is a solitary pulsar that lies 1,100 light-years away in the constellation Pisces. While measuring the pulsar's heft and proportions, NICER revealed that the shapes and locations of million-degree hot spots on the pulsar’s surface are much stranger than generally thought.

Using NICER observations from July 2017 to December 2018, two groups of scientists mapped J0030’s hot spots using independent methods and converged on nearly identical results for its mass and size. One team, led by researchers at the University of Amsterdam, determined the pulsar is around 1.3 times the Sun’s mass, 15.8 miles (25.4 kilometers) across and has two hot spots — one small and circular, the other long and crescent-shaped. A second team found J0030 is about 1.4 times the Sun’s mass, about 16.2 miles (26 kilometers) wide and has two or three oval-shaped hot spots. All spots in all models are in the pulsar’s southern hemisphere — unlike textbook images where the spots lie on opposite sides other at each magnetic poles.

Music: "Uncertain Ahead" and "Flowing Cityscape" (underscore). Both from Universal Production Music

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Scott Wiessinger (USRA): Producer
Jeanette Kazmierczak (University of Maryland College Park): Science Writer
Francis Reddy (University of Maryland College Park): Science Writer
Michael Lentz (USRA): Animator
Barb Mattson (University of Maryland College Park): Narrator
Zaven Arzoumanian (NASA/GSFC): Scientist

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Комментарии
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This is one of the nicer updates from NASA.

TheChiefCoin
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What previously thought as bad 3d animation turns out to be depiction of light bending property of a pulsar. Nice!

masbaiy
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But what really are these hot spots and how they originated?

soniyadhingra
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Just imagine being so dense you can see the back of your head 🤪

headfella
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getting the radius of a 15 mile object from 1, 100 light years physics

lerpmmo
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I m from Romania and when I grow up i want to be a astronomer

harpx
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Resolving a detailed image of a 16 miles wide object at 1000 light years is like looking at a golf ball three times further away than Pluto, or photographing a detailed image of a single animal cell on the moon about half of one thousandth of a mm across. A surprising accomplishment, if my estimate is not way off, (by counting the binary power index, double distance halves the apparent size).
This must be due to the much shorter wavelength of x-rays producing higher resolution images.🌖

davidgriffiths
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I love Goddard's social media outreach. This is excellently presented and interesting news. Everyone else: see, this is how science works (ideally). Have theories, observation shows theory out of concordance with reality, rework theories....the cycle continues and our species bootstraps our collective knowledge.

doxielain
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Glad I was born in the right generation to see this

triton
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Amazing video. Universe, you’re such a tease with your closely held secrets.

mmaaddict
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All mater bends "the gravity of space time" around it... it's just proportional to the mass of the matter.

ryanjones
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The animation reminds me of a magnifying glass raked above the ground

theDudeAbids
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16miles across? I didn't know they were that dense. That's mind blowing.

KienDLuu
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It couldn’t happen to a NICER satellite 🛰😊.

kansascityshuffle
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Thanks so much to everyone at NASA Goddard for making these highly-educational research update videos, keep up the fantastic work! :)

metanumia
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That's beautiful, we can observe space time bending due to high mass. Same thing happen with black hole but black hole are dark so can't truly make complete picture of what's going on.. neutron stars are hear to rescue... 😊

Spooferish
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Theres your wormhole folks, so whos going in first?

bronxpane
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Must be hard to focus your instruments while traveling 17.5 thousand miles an hour on the ISS.

redeemedchannel
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An examination of an object the size of a small asteroid, from 1100 light years away?

lamp-stand
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0:57 I mean, yeah, *_Everything does_*

voltariantechnologyinc.