The Free Press Journal

Will Chinese space telescope solve the mystery of pulsar?

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China is planning to launch a space telescope to unravel the mystery of pulsars in our Milky Way galaxy, according to scientists. A pulsar is a highly magnetised, rotating neutron star, which emits two beams of electromag­netic radiation which can be observed only when the beam of emission is pointing towards the Earth.

To date, scientists have discovered over 2,000 pulsars. The Milky Way is thought to have around 100 million of them. “We are still not clear about the interior of pulsars,” said Zhang Shuangnan, lead scientist of the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope (HXMT). “Current physical laws cannot describe well the substances in the state of a pulsar, since no lab on Earth can create a density as high as a pulsar. So, we have to conduct more observatio­ns of pulsars,” said Zhang, director of the Key Laboratory of Particle Astrophysi­cs of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

A pulsar is so strange that when the first one was discovered in 1967, it was mistaken for signals from aliens, ‘Xinhua’ reported. A neutron star is the collapsed core of a large star. They are regarded as the most accurate astronomic­al clock in the universe. Scientists believe they can use pulsars as “lighthouse­s” to help navigation in future interplane­tary or interstell­ar travel. According to Lu Fangjun, chief designer of the payload of HXMT, long-time monitoring of pulsars could help unravel the mystery of their energy sources.

A pulsar is so strange that when the first one was discovered in 1967, it was mistaken for signals from aliens

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