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  2. Pulsar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulsar

    In rotation-powered pulsars, the beam is the result of the rotational energy of the neutron star, which generates an electrical field and very strong magnetic field, resulting in the acceleration of protons and electrons on the star surface and the creation of an electromagnetic beam emanating from the poles of the magnetic field.

  3. Scientists Just Solved the Mystery Behind This Strange ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/scientists-just-solved...

    Neutron stars, including pulsars, can be as small as about 12 miles across—if Earth rotated at the same speed as one of these stars, an Earth day would be nearly 4,300 hours long.

  4. PSR J0002+6216 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0002+6216

    PSR J0002+6216, also dubbed the Cannonball Pulsar, is a pulsar discovered by the Einstein@Home project in 2017. [2] It is one of the fastest moving pulsars known, and has moved 53 ly (5.0 × 10 14 km; 3.1 × 10 14 mi) away from the location of its formation supernova, where the remaining supernova nebula, CTB 1 (Abell 85 [3]), is.

  5. Rotating radio transient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotating_radio_transient

    Rotating radio transients (RRATs) are sources of short, moderately bright, radio pulses, which were first discovered in 2006. [1] RRATs are thought to be pulsars, i.e. rotating magnetised neutron stars which emit more sporadically and/or with higher pulse-to-pulse variability than the bulk of the known pulsars.

  6. PSR J0952–0607 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0952–0607

    PSR J0952–0607 is a massive millisecond pulsar in a binary system, located between 3,200–5,700 light-years (970–1,740 pc) from Earth in the constellation Sextans. [6] It holds the record for being the most massive neutron star known as of 2022, with a mass 2.35 ± 0.17 times that of the Sun—potentially close to the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff mass upper limit for neutron stars.

  7. Hulse–Taylor pulsar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hulse–Taylor_pulsar

    In 2004, Taylor and Joel M. Weisberg published a new analysis of the experimental data to date, concluding that the 0.2% disparity between the data and the predicted results is due to poorly known galactic constants, including the Sun's distance from the Galactic Center, the pulsar's proper motion and its distance from Earth. While there are ...

  8. Earth's rotation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth's_rotation

    Earth's rotation axis moves with respect to the fixed stars (inertial space); the components of this motion are precession and nutation. It also moves with respect to Earth's crust; this is called polar motion. Precession is a rotation of Earth's rotation axis, caused primarily by external torques from the gravity of the Sun, Moon and other bodies.

  9. PSR B1257+12 C - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_B1257+12_C

    PSR B1257+12 C, alternatively designated PSR B1257+12 d and also named Phobetor, is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting the pulsar Lich approximately 2,315 light-years (710 parsecs; 22 quadrillion kilometres) away from Earth in the constellation of Virgo. It was one of the first planets ever discovered outside the Solar System.