PASADENA,
Calif.-- The search for gravitational waves has revealed new
information about the core of one of the most famous objects in the
sky: the Crab Pulsar in the Crab Nebula. An analysis by the
international LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
Observatory) Scientific Collaboration to be submitted to Astrophysical
Journal Letters has shown that no more than 4 percent of the energy
loss of the pulsar is caused by the emission of gravitational waves.
The Crab Nebula, located 6,500 light years away in the constellation
Taurus, was formed in a spectacular supernova explosion in 1054.
According to ancient sources, including Chinese texts that referred to
it as a "guest star," the explosion was visible in daylight for more
than three weeks, and may briefly have been brighter than the full
moon. At the heart of the nebula remains an incredibly rapidly spinning
neutron star that sweeps two narrow radio beams across the Earth each
time it turns. The lighthouse-like radio pulses have given the star the
name "pulsar."
"The Crab Pulsar is spinning at a rate of 30 times per second. However,
its rotation rate is decreasing rapidly relative to most pulsars,
indicating that it is radiating energy at a prodigious rate," says
Graham Woan of the University of Glasgow, who co-led the science group
that used LIGO data to analyze the Crab Pulsar, along with Michael
Landry of the LIGO Hanford Observatory.
Pulsars are almost perfect spheres made up of neutrons and contain more
mass than the sun in an object only 10 km in radius. The physical
mechanisms for energy loss and the accompanying braking of the pulsar
spin rate have been hypothesized to be asymmetric particle emission,
magnetic dipole radiation, and gravitational-wave emission.
Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of space and time and are
an important consequence of Einstein's general theory of relativity. A
perfectly smooth neutron star will not generate gravitational waves as
it spins, but the situation changes if its shape is distorted.
Gravitational waves would have been detectable even if the star were
deformed by only a few meters, which could arise because its semisolid
crust is strained or because its enormous magnetic field distorts it.
"The Crab neutron star is relatively young and therefore expected to be
less symmetrical than most, which means it could generate more
gravitational waves," says Graham Woan.
The scenario that gravitational waves significantly brake the Crab pulsar has been disproved by the new analysis.
Using published timing data about the pulsar rotation rate from the
Jodrell Bank Observatory, LIGO scientists monitored the neutron star
from November 2005 to August 2006 and looked for a synchronous
gravitational-wave signal using data from the three LIGO
interferometers, which were combined to create a single, highly
sensitive detector.
The analysis revealed no signs of gravitational waves. But, say the
scientists, this result is itself important because it provides
information about the pulsar and its structure.
"We can now say something definite about the role gravitational waves
play in the dynamics of the Crab Pulsar based on our observations,"
says David Reitze, a professor of physics at the University of Florida
and spokesperson for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration. "This is the
first time the spin-down limit has been broken for any pulsar, and this
result is an important milestone for LIGO."
Michael Landry adds, "These results strongly imply that no more than 4
percent of the pulsar's energy loss is due to gravitational radiation.
The remainder of the loss must be due to other mechanisms, such as a
combination of electromagnetic radiation generated by the rapidly
rotating magnetic field of the pulsar and the emission of high-velocity
particles into the nebula."
"LIGO has evolved over many years to its present capability to produce
scientific results of real significance," says Jay Marx of the
California Institute of Technology, LIGO's executive director. "The
limit on the Crab Pulsar's emission of gravitational waves is but one
of a number of important results obtained from LIGO's recent two-year
observing period. These results only serve to further our anticipation
for the spectacular science that will come from LIGO in the coming
years."
"Neutron stars are very hot when they are formed in a supernova, and
then they cool rapidly and form a semisolid crust. Our observation of a
relatively young star like the Crab is important because it shows that
this skin, if it had irregularities when it first 'froze,' has by now
become quite smooth," says Bernard F. Schutz, director of the Albert
Einstein Institute in Germany.
Joseph Taylor, a Nobel Prize-winning radio astronomer and professor of
physics at Princeton University, says, "The physics world has been
waiting eagerly for scientific results from LIGO. It is exciting that
we now know something concrete about how nearly spherical a neutron
star must be, and we have definite limits on the strength of its
internal magnetic field."
The LIGO project, which is funded by the National Science Foundation,
was designed and is operated by Caltech and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology for the purpose of detecting gravitational waves, and for
the development of gravitational-wave observations as an astronomical
tool.
Research is carried out by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, a group
of 600 scientists at universities around the United States and in 11
foreign countries. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration interferometer
network includes the LIGO interferometers (including the 2 km and 4 km
detectors in Hanford, Washington, and a 4 km instrument in Livingston,
Louisiana) and the GEO600 interferometer, located in Hannover, Germany,
and designed and operated by scientists from the Max Planck Institute
for Gravitational Physics and partners in the United Kingdom funded by
the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
The next major milestone for LIGO is the Advanced LIGO Project, slated
for operation in 2014. Advanced LIGO, which will utilize the
infrastructure of the LIGO observatories, will be 10 times more
sensitive. Advanced LIGO will incorporate advanced designs and
technologies that have been developed by the LIGO Scientific
Collaboration. It is supported by the NSF, with additional
contributions from the U.K. STFC and the German Max Planck
Gessellschaft.
The increased sensitivity will be important because it will allow
scientists to detect cataclysmic events such as black-hole and
neutron-star collisions at ten-times-greater distances and to search
for much smaller "hills" on the Crab Pulsar.
Copyright: Yuba
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