Three new pulsars discovered in an ancient globular cluster by FAST

Three new pulsars discovered in an ancient globular cluster by FAST

Using China’s Five-hundred-meter Aperture ⁣Spherical‌ radio Telescope (FAST), astronomers have discovered three new pulsars in an old Galactic globular cluster known as Messier ‌15. Two of them turned out to be long-period pulsars, while the remaining ‍one⁤ spins so rapidly ⁣that ⁣it was classified as a millisecond pulsar. The finding ⁣was reported in a paper published‌ Dec. 11 on the pre-print server arXiv.

Located some 35,700 light years away from the Earth, Messier 15 (also known as NGC 7078) is a core-collapsed GC with ​a radius of about 88 light years and an estimated mass of 560,000 solar masses. ​It is one of the oldest (about 12 billion years old) and most metal-poor Galactic GCs (with a metallicity of approximately −2.25), and one of the most densely packed GCs in our galaxy.

Previous observations of Messier 15 have detected nine pulsars and the first one was identified in⁢ 1989. According to simulations, Messier 15 is​ possibly one of the GCs ⁣with the highest number of pulsars. That is why a team of astronomers led by Yuxiao Wu of the ⁢Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications⁢ in China, decided to conduct a pulsar search in this cluster using FAST.

The newfound pulsars received⁤ the designations PSR J2129+1210J, PSR J2129+1210K and PSR ⁢J2129+1210L. The observations found that PSR J2129+1210J is an MSP, while the other ⁤two are long-period pulsars.

According to the study, PSR​ J2129+1210J is an isolated pulsar with a spin period of approximately 11.84 milliseconds and its dispersion measure was calculated to be 66.68 pc/cm3. When it comes‌ to PSR J2129+1210K, it has a ‌spin‍ period of about 1.93 seconds⁤ and a dispersion measure of 68.01 pc/csm3.

2023-12-20 14:41:03
Article from phys.org rnrn

Exit mobile version