• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Dead Pulsars Are Emitting Radio Waves. Massive “Mountains” Measuring 1 Centimeter Tall Could Be To Blame

June 25, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

New research from physicists at Peking University, China, suggests that some pulsars may have massive mountains on them, measuring up to 1 centimeter (0.4 inches) tall.

At the end of a giant star’s life, the core collapses and the outer layers are blown away in a supernova explosion. After this, what is left behind is either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on the size of the original star.

“While neutron stars’ dark cousins, black holes, might get all the attention, neutron stars are actually the densest material that we can directly observe,” NASA explains. “To get an idea of how dense they are, one sugar cube of neutron star material would weigh about 1 trillion kilograms (or 1 billion tons) on Earth – about as much as a mountain. That is what happens when you cram a star with up to twice the mass of our Sun into a sphere the diameter of a city.”

In 1967, astronomers observed a number of unusual radio flashes coming from the sky. Originally designated LGM-1 (for “little green men” 1), some briefly put it down as a candidate for alien communication. However, we now know that these signals originate from pulsars, a new type of neutron star that produces light as it spins.



“Pulsar radio emission is believed to be produced by a secondary electron-positron plasma generated in the polar regions of a neutron star,” a paper on the topic explains. “This process includes primary particle acceleration by a longitudinal electric field, γ-quanta emission due to curvature radiation, production of secondary electron-positron pairs, and, finally, secondary particles acceleration in the opposite direction, which also leads to the creation of secondary particles.”

Here’s where it gets puzzling. According to our best models, when a pulsar’s spin slows down to a certain threshold – known dramatically as the “death line” – they should no longer emit radio waves, no longer having the powerful electric field required to produce them. And yet, there are pulsars out there – notably PSR J0250+5854 and PSR J2144-3933 – which continue to emit radio pulses, despite being below this “death line”. It has been unclear exactly how these “dead” pulsars are “alive”, but alive they certainly are.

Teams have suggested in the recent past that an explanation might be teeny tiny (but still massive in the “mass” sense of the word) mountains at the surface of the neutron star. In this idea, if the surface is rugged with small “mountains” – sometimes called “zits” – it might enhance the parallel electric field near the surface of the stellar remnant, and in turn enhance positron acceleration.

In the new work, which has not yet been peer reviewed, the team used complex mathematical frameworks to model neutron stars with small mountains at their surface, to see if they could be responsible for the radio signals we see from “dead” pulsars.

“The results show that small mountains on a pulsar’s polar cap tend to significantly influence the properties of the inner vacuum gap, making it easier for sparks to form,” they explain. “In this scenario, the magnetospheric activity observed from the pulsars PSR J0250+5854 and PSR J2144−3933, which lie below the pulsar death line, would be reproduced, and the irregular discharge behaviour in other polar cap regions could also be understood.”

According to the team, the “mountains” must be smaller than 1 centimeter tall. Any taller than this, and they would emit gravitational waves, draining the neutron star’s rotational energy. While that may sound teeny tiny, it’s not clear that structures that tall can last for very long. Previous research suggests they cannot be more than a few millimeters tall, or they could break the neutron star’s crust.

In the new work, the team suggests that if the mountains do exist, they could provide clues as to what goes on at the neutron star’s surface, and inside neutron stars themselves. 

“Because of the extreme complexity of lattice quantum chromodynamics simulations non-perturbatively, it is currently impossible for us to theoretically determine the state of matter of pulsars,” the team explains. “However, the presence of small mountains or other local uneven structures on the pulsar surface is a constraint on the state of matter because it requires the surface to have a strong shear modulus or the thermal electrons would destroy the mountain in the gap, so the surface matter must be solid with strong shear modulus.”

While we know that neutron stars are – surprise – mainly comprised of neutrons, their dense, extremely high-pressure cores are more of a mystery. One proposal, backed up a little by the latest research, is that neutron stars are made of “strangeon” matter, or “strange nucleon“, where matter is held together by the strong nuclear force (which usually binds the nucleus of atoms together) instead of the electromagnetic force.

“If a pulsar is a strangeon star proposed by Xu (2003) which takes into account the quark degrees of freedom, its surface would consist of strangeon matter, a condensate bound by the strong interaction with a binding energy of several MeV, much higher than the thermal energy of surface electrons,” the team explains. “Consequently, the solid nature of the strangeon star’s surface enables the stable existence of local unevenness. Furthermore, from a symmetry-energy perspective, the strangeon phase is energetically favored over conventional neutron matter configurations.”

The team suggests that if there are small mountains on pulsars, China’s FAST (Five- hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope) may be able to find further observational evidence of them, providing further clues as to what’s going on inside these potentially very strange stars.

The study is posted to pre-print server arXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Late goal gives Uruguay 1-0 win over Ecuador
  2. Rare Complete Ancient Egyptian Zodiac Discovered On Temple Ceiling
  3. This Woman’s Bionic Arm Is Melded To Her Bones And Nervous System
  4. Some Palaeolithic People Had Plant-Rich Diets, Challenging Meat-Heavy Fad Diet Claims

Source Link: Dead Pulsars Are Emitting Radio Waves. Massive "Mountains" Measuring 1 Centimeter Tall Could Be To Blame

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • This 120-Million-Year-Old Bird Choked To Death On Over 800 Stones. Why? Nobody Knows
  • Radiation Fog: A 643-Kilometer Belt Of Mist Lingers Over California’s Central Valley
  • New Images Of Comet 3I/ATLAS From 4 Different Missions Reveal A Peculiar Little World
  • Neanderthals Used Reindeer Bones To Skin Animals And Make Leather Clothes
  • Why Do Power Lines Have Those Big Colorful Balls On Them?
  • Rare Peek Inside An Egg Sac Reveals An Adorable Developing Leopard Shark
  • What Is A Superhabitable Planet And Have We Found Any?
  • The Moon Will Travel Across The Sky With A Friend On Sunday. Here’s What To Know
  • How Fast Does Sound Travel Across The Worlds Of The Solar System?
  • A Wonky-Necked Giraffe In California Lived To 21 Against The Odds
  • Seal Finger: What Is This Horrible Infection That Makes Your Hand Swell Like A Balloon?
  • “They Usually Aren’t Second Tier”: When Wolves Adopt Pups From Rival Packs
  • The Road To New Physics Beyond Our Knowledge Might Pass Through Neutrinos
  • Flu Season Is Revving Up – What Are The Symptoms To Look Out For?
  • Asteroid Bennu Was Missing Just One Ingredient Needed To Kickstart Life – We just Found It
  • Rare Core Samples Provide “Once In A Lifetime” Opportunity To Study The Giant Line That Slices Through Scotland
  • The “Special Regions” On Mars Where It Is Forbidden To Explore, For Good Reason
  • Do Animals Fall For Magic Tricks? Watch A Devastated Squirrel Monkey Prove That Yes, They Do
  • Google’s CEO Wants AI Data Centers In Space In 2027. There Is One Massive Problem
  • Live Seven-Arm Octopus Spotted In The Deep Sea – Only The Fourth Time It’s Been Seen In 40 Years
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version