Analyze This: A recently spotted space object is puzzling scientists
A mystery object has just been spotted in our galaxy. The puzzling entity could be a very heavy neutron star — the left-behind corpse of a giant star. Or maybe it’s one of the lightest black holes ever observed.
The MeerKAT Radio Telescope in South Africa spotted the unidentified object circling a pulsar. The observatory was monitoring pulsars in a star cluster 40,000 light years from Earth.
As these pulsars spin, they shoot out powerful beams of light, like cosmic lighthouses. Some pulsars’ beams flash by Earth as regularly as the ticking of a precise clock. If the flashes don’t arrive quite when expected, researchers can tell that another object in space is messing with the pulsar’s motion. They can use the timing of the light flashes to work out the other object’s mass.
The flashes of a pulsar called PSR J0514−4002E revealed an invisible companion. The object weighs 2.1 to 2.7 times the mass of the sun. That might make it too heavy to be a neutron star. But it would be lightweight for a black hole. Scientists suspect that once a neutron star gets to be about two to three times the mass of the sun, it collapses and forms a black hole. But no one knows at what mass this occurs. So astronomers can’t be entirely sure of the space object’s identity.
Researchers shared these findings in the January 19 Science. The team hopes to unveil the object’s identity as it continues to track the pulsar’s flashes. This may shed light on other similar space oddities, too.
Misfit mass
M. Fishbach/Science 2024
Scientists have studied many neutron stars and black holes. These observations have included electromagnetic events (orange points). Such studies capture light to learn about space objects. Other observations are based on ripples in spacetime, or gravitational waves (blue and dark gray). Neutron stars have lower masses (left of gray bar). Black holes have higher masses (right of gray bar). The newfound mystery object (large yellow dot in the grey region) falls between typical neutron star masses and black hole masses.
Data Dive:
Look at the X-axis. What does it mean to describe an object’s mass by “solar masses”?
What type of observation is most common for neutron stars? What kind is most common for black holes?
The data points on the left are neutron stars. Look at how their masses are clustered. Roughly what is their average mass?
The data points on the right are black holes. Look at how their masses are clustered. Roughly what is their average mass?
How does the mass of the new mystery object compare with that of neutron stars? How does it compare with the masses of black holes?
Welcome to Billionaire Club Co LLC, your gateway to a brand-new social media experience! Sign up today and dive into over 10,000 fresh daily articles and videos curated just for your enjoyment. Enjoy the ad free experience, unlimited content interactions, and get that coveted blue check verification—all for just $1 a month!
Account Frozen
Your account is frozen. You can still view content but cannot interact with it.
Please go to your settings to update your account status.
Open Profile Settings