Millennium Post

RARE NEUTRON STAR DISCOVERED

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WASHINGTON DC: NASA scientists have discovered a special kind of neutron star for the first time outside of the Milky Way galaxy, and released a stunning image of the stellar body located 200,000 light years from Earth.

Neutron stars are the ultra dense cores of massive stars that collapse and undergo a supernova explosion.

The newly identified neutron star, discovered using data from NASA'S Chandra X-ray Observator­y and the European Southern Observator­y's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile, is a rare variety that has both a low magnetic field and no stellar companion.

The neutron star is located within the remains of a supernova - known as 1E 0102.27219 (E0102) - in the Small Magellanic Cloud, located 200,000 light years from Earth.

A new composite image of E0102 allows astronomer­s to learn new details about this object that was discovered more than three decades ago.

Oxygen-rich supernova remnants like E0102 are important for understand­ing how massive stars fuse lighter elements into heavier ones before they explode.

Seen up to a few thousand years after the original explo- sion, oxygen-rich remnants contain the debris ejected from the dead star's interior. This debris is observed on Wednesday hurtling through space after being expelled at millions of miles per hour.

Chandra observatio­ns of E0102 show that the supernova remnant is dominated by a large ring-shaped structure in X-rays, associated with the blast wave of the supernova.

The new MUSE data revealed a smaller ring of gas that is expanding more slowly than the blast wave. At the centre of this ring is a blue pointlike source of X-rays. Together, the small ring and point source act like a celestial bull's eye.

The combined Chandra and MUSE data suggest that this source is an isolated neutron star, created in the supernova explosion about two millennia ago.

The X-ray energy signature, or 'spectrum,' of this source is very similar to that of the neutron stars located at the center of two other famous oxygenrich supernova remnants: Cassiopeia A (Cas A) and Puppis A. These two neutron stars also do not have companion stars.

The lack of evidence for extended radio emission or pulsed X-ray radiation, typically associated with rapidly rotating highly-magnetised neutron stars, indicates that the astronomer­s have detected the X-radiation from the hot surface of an isolated neutron star with low magnetic fields.

About ten such objects have been detected in the Milky Way galaxy, but this is the first one detected outside our galaxy.

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