Until now, scientists have determined the mass of stars, planets, and moons by studying their motion in relation to others nearby, using the gravitational pull between the two as the basis for their calculations.
Now, mathematicians have found a new way to measure the mass of young stars, even if the star exists on its own in space.
“For pulsars, we have been able to use principles of nuclear physics, rather than gravity, to work out what their mass is—an exciting breakthrough which has the potential to revolutionize the way we make this kind of calculation,” says Wynn Ho, of mathematical sciences at the University of Southampton, who led the research. Pulsars are highly magnetized rotating neutron stars formed from the remains of massive stars after they explode into supernovae.
Collaborator Cristobal Espinoza of the Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile explains: “All previous precise measurements of pulsar masses have been made for stars that orbit another object, using the same techniques that were used to measure the mass of the Earth or Moon, or discover the first extrasolar planets. Our technique is very different and can be used for pulsars in isolation.”
Pulsars emit a rotating beam of electromagnetic radiation, which can be detected by telescopes when the beam sweeps past the Earth, like observing the beam of a lighthouse. They are renowned for their incredibly stable rate of rotation, but young pulsars occasionally experience so-called “glitches,” where they are found to speed up for a very brief period of time.
The prevailing theory is that these glitches arise as a rapidly spinning superfluid within the star transfers its rotational energy to the star’s crust, the component that is tracked by observations.