News and Events
Measuring a Pulsar's Smoothness
Team finds significant results from major collaboration
June 3, 2008
(Originally published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
In one of the first significant scientific findings from a huge
collaborative effort to detect gravitational waves, the team operating
the Laser Interferometer Gravity-wave Observatory (LIGO) is reporting
this week that the pulsar at the center of the Crab Nebula must have an
extremely smooth surface.
"This is one of the very first findings
where the sensitivity of the instrument and the kind of analysis we've
done is of more scientific interest," says David Shoemaker, senior
research scientist in the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and
Space Science and director of the MIT LIGO Laboratory. The report was
posted online this week, and will be submitted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The Crab pulsar is a rapidly
spinning ball of ultra-dense matter, called a neutron star, created
when a star died in a massive explosion called a supernova. The remains
of the star collapsed so that its atoms were squeezed into subatomic
particles called neutrons, and the mass of the star -- once a sphere
about a half-million miles across -- was compressed into a ball only
about 6 miles (or 10 km) across.
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| The Crab Nebula as shown in a composite image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. (Courtesy NASA) |
The explosion that produced the
Crab pulsar occurred in 1054 A.D., and was recorded as a "guest star"
that could be seen in broad daylight. The rapidly spinning remnant,
called a pulsar, emits twin beams of radio waves like the beams of
light from a lighthouse, whose blinking on and off 30 times each second
provides a precise measurement of the pulsar's rotation rate.
Astronomers
observed years ago that the pulsar's rotation has been slowing down.
"There are a number of theories as to how it can lose energy" to put
the brakes on its rotation, Shoemaker says: by emitting particles,
magnetism, or gravitational waves, which are disturbances in the very
structure of space.
But observations with LIGO in 2005 and 2006
found no such gravitational waves, up to the level the instrument could
detect. That means at most, only 4 percent of the energy from the
pulsar could be in the form of gravitational waves.
Any
irregularities on its surface would produce gravity waves, which were
predicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity. The fact that
none were seen shows there cannot be any bumps more than a few meters
high on the pulsar.
MIT shares responsibility for LIGO with the
California Institute of Technology, which has a grant from the National
Science Foundation to operate the project. It includes about 600
researchers from dozens of institutions around the world. Besides
Shoemaker, MIT associate professor of physics Erotokritos Katsavounidis
leads the MIT LIGO data analysis group and worked on the Crab pulsar
analysis.
The LIGO instrument is just beginning a major
upgrade, led by Shoemaker, to increase its power by tenfold and allow
it to monitor a thousand-times-greater volume of space for the presence
of gravity waves. That means that it will be able to accomplish as much
in a few hours as the present version can in a year, Shoemaker says.
The new version, called Advanced LIGO, is expected to begin operation
in 2013. MIT Kavli Institute principal research scientist Peter
Fritschel is the systems scientist for the Advanced LIGO.
"If
there's no signal after a year with Advanced LIGO," Shoemaker says,
"then there's something wrong with the theory of relativity."
Press release may be found here.