Pulsars and neutron stars
Sometimes these objects emit X-rays in a very rapid regular, periodic
pattern. These objects are called X-ray pulsars. Pulsars, it is believed, are
spinning neutron stars. A neutron star is the superdense remains of an exploded
star that gravitationally collapsed back in on itself to form a small,
compressed core of neutrons. When a neutron star is in a binary system with a
sun-like star, matter is gravitationally pulled off this stellar companion.
We can think of it this way: "It's the sound of matter going splat,"
says UC Berkeley astrophysicist Jonathan Arons. During this process, X-rays are
emitted.
More specifically, pulsars have jets of particles moving at the
speed of
light streaming out of their two magnetic poles. These jets produce very
powerful beams of light. We know that on Earth, the spin axis (true north) is
not the same as the magnetic axis. This is also seen in X-ray pulsars.
Therefore, the beam of light from the jet sweeps around as the pulsar rotates,
like the spotlight in a lighthouse does. As a ship in the ocean that sees only
regular flashes of light, we on Earth see pulsars turn on and off as the beam
sweeps over the Earth.

You see, how much mass the star had when it died determines what it becomes.
Stars about the same size as the Sun become white dwarfs, which glow from left
over heat. Stars that have about 3 times or more the mass of the Sun compact
into neutron stars. And a star with mass many, many times the Sun's gets
crushed into a single point, which we call a black hole.
The characteristics of such stars listed on the previous two pages are
also going to be features of the types of stars which the students will be
examining today with Folding.
A neutron star is the super dense remains of an exploded star that
gravitationally collapsed back in on itself to form a small, compressed core of
neutrons. It is not unusual for a neutron star to emit X-rays. When a neutron
star is in a binary system with a sun-like star, matter is gravitationally
pulled off this stellar companion. As the matter falls toward
the neutron star, it emits X-rays. We can think of it this
way: "It's the sound of matter going splat,"
says UC Berkeley astrophysicist Jonathan Arons.
Sometimes the emitted X-rays are pulsed, or modulated, by the spinning of the
neutron star.
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