07x01 - Nightmares of Neutron Stars
Posted: 03/05/24 07:54
Neutron stars.
Super heavy, super dense.
Extreme.
Gravitational, magnetic, hot.
Scary.
They destroy planets.
They can even destroy stars.
A cosmic conundrum.
They're very, very massive,
but they're also
really, really small.
Tiny cosmic super powers
long overshadowed by black holes...
Until now.
Neutron stars have
been thrust very much
to the forefront of
modern astrophysics.
The world's astronomers know
that something is happening.
Something's up, it's new,
and it's different.
Neutron stars are
the most interesting
astrophysical object
in the universe.
Now firmly in the limelight,
neutron stars, creators of
our most precious elements
and life itself.
130 million
light years form earth,
a galaxy called
"NGC-4993."
Two dead stars trapped in
a rapidly diminishing spiral.
It's like listening to the
ringing of the cosmos itself.
The sound of that collision,
if you will,
imprinted on the fabric
of space and time itself.
Livingston, Louisiana,
the advanced LiGO observatory.
Its mission...
To detect gravitational waves
generated in space.
A gravitational wave is
a distortion of space time
that's caused by, usually,
some kind of very traumatic
gravitational event.
Events such as a supernova,
or the collision of black holes,
or massive stars.
2015... LiGO makes history
by detecting gravitational waves
for the first time,
100 years after
Einstein's prediction.
It's the signature of
the crash of black holes.
It's almost like
listening to the sound
of a distant car crash
that you didn't witness.
But you're so clever,
and the sound of this car crash
is such a unique signature,
that you are able to use
your computers to model
exactly the type of cars that
must have collided together.
In 2017, LiGO picks up a
different kind of signal.
The unfolding of
the August 2017 event
was nothing short
of extraordinary.
So, the signal comes in,
and the signal is strange.
It has a long-lasting signal.
It's over 100 seconds.
Less than two seconds later,
a gamma-ray telescope
detected a flash of gamma rays
from that same part of the sky.
And very quickly,
the world's astronomers
know that something
is happening.
Something's up, it's new,
and it's different.
This combination of
a long gravitational wave signal
and a blaze of gamma rays...
Acts as a beacon
for astronomers.
When they saw this event,
they sent out a worldwide alert
to astronomers
across the globe, saying,
"hey, we saw
something interesting,
and it came from
a particular patch of sky.
Then, all the chatter started
amongst the
astronomical community,
and everyone starting
pointing their telescopes
at this one part of the sky.
Within hours,
thousands of astronomers
and physicists across the globe
are frantically
collecting data
on this mysterious event.
There is not just
the gravitational waves,
there is not just
the gamma rays.
There's a visible light,
there's infrared light,
there's ultraviolet light.
And all these signals together
tell us a story.
And this was the very first time
we've seen these two
multiple messengers at once...
Gravitational waves
and regular light.
So, that was a groundbreaking
moment for astronomy.
Scientists realize
this isn't another
black-hole collision.
This is something different.
When you see an expl*si*n
in the universe,
there aren't exactly
a lot of candidates.
There's not a lot of things
in the universe that blow up.
But the length of
the signal is the smoking g*n.
The collision
of two black holes was quick.
This one was the longer,
slower, death end-spiral
of two neutron stars.
Spiraling in,
closer and closer, speeding up.
And then, when they
finally collide,
when they finally touch,
releasing a tremendous
amount of energy
into the surrounding system.
The collision
throws up huge clouds of matter,
which may have slowed down
the light very slightly.
The light
and gravitational waves
travel for 130 million years,
arriving at earth
almost simultaneously.
It's the first time astronomers
see neutron stars collide.
They call it a "kilonova."
And this spectacular
cosmic event
doesn't just release energy.
The aftermath of this
neutron-star collision,
this kilonova, created
a tremendous amount of debris,
which blasted out into space.
And this may finally
have provided us
the evidence of where
some very special
heavy elements are created.
Through the destruction of
a neutron star comes the seeds
for the essential ingredients
of life itself.
We breathe oxygen
molecules... O2.
Water is hydrogen and oxygen.
Most of our body is made up
of carbon compounds
that include nitrogen,
phosphorus.
One of the big questions
in science
over the history of humanity
has been,
"what are the origins
of these elements?"
And it turns out that neutron
stars play a critical role
in creating many of
the heavy elements.
Most of the elements
on earth are made in stars.
But how the heaviest
elements are made
has been one of science's
longest-running mysteries.
For a long time,
we knew there was a problem
with making these
heavier atoms...
Things like gold and platinum,
all the way out towards uranium.
And really, the most
energetic thing we had
in the universe
was supernova explosions.
So, they had to be created
somehow in supernovas.
But when scientists
ran computer simulations,
virtual supernovas failed to
forge these oversized atoms.
In 2016, astronomer
Edo Berger explained
a potential solution
to the mystery.
If you open
any one of these books,
and flip to the page that
tells you where gold came from,
it will tell you that gold
came from supernova explosions.
But it was becoming clear that
the textbooks were out of date.
To form heavy elements
requires a lot of neutrons,
and so, another possible
theory was that
the heaviest elements
were produced in the mergers
of two neutron stars
in a binary system.
But at the time,
no one had actually seen
a neutron-star collision.
It was difficult
to convince the community
that this was
a potential channel
for the production
of heavy elements.
The proof is to actually
see this process
happening in the universe.
The 2017 kilonova
provides the
perfect opportunity.
It generates thousands
of hours of data.
Scientists notice a pattern...
Subtle changes in the color
of the kilonova remnants.
In space, when you have
an event that is very bright,
it emits a certain
amount of light,
and it emits it at
certain wavelengths...
What we think of as colors.
Different colors
in a pyrotechnics display
indicate the use of different
chemicals in fireworks.
In the same way, scientists
can uncover the elements
in the kilonova
by the colors in the expl*si*n.
As the kilonova turns red,
they realize it's the result
of newly-created heavy elements
starting to absorb blue light.
As we watched
this remnant change...
The expl*si*n change in
color, expand and cool...
We could estimate what sort of
elements were being produced.
The light from the debris shifts
from blue and Violet
to red and infrared.
The color change provides clues
about the presence
of certain heavy metals.
Well, this neutron-star
collision, this kilonova,
produced brightness
and a color spectrum
that are consistent
with models of predictions
that produce gold and platinum.
This model
is called "The R-process,"
short for
"rapid neutron capture."
That is a bit of
a complicated term
that describes how we make atoms
heavier than iron.
You need a really
neutron-rich environment.
And as you might imagine,
a neutron-star collision
is a very neutron-rich
environment.
If these models are correct...
And this blows me away...
This collision, this kilonova,
produced several dozen times
the mass of the Earth
in just gold.
The 2017 kilonova
not only reveals
the origin of key elements,
it sheds light on
the neutron star's interior...
The strongest material
in the universe
creating a magnetic field
a trillion times greater
than that of earth.
Two neutron stars
caught in a death spiral.
This massive kilonova expl*si*n
not only sheds light
on the creation
of heavy elements,
such as gold and platinum,
it also provides scientists
with a unique insight
into one of the most mysterious
objects in the universe.
Trying to imagine what
a neutron star is really like
really challenges
our imagination.
It also challenges
our theoretical physics.
We have to go to our computer
models, our mathematics,
to have some estimate
of what this might be like.
Now,
scientists don't have to rely
on their imaginations.
They can use hard data
from the kilonova
to work out what makes
neutron stars tick.
There's so much information
we got from observing
that one single event, that one
colliding neutron star pair.
Now, for the first time,
we have an accurate estimate
of the mass of a neutron star,
and the diameter.
We can finally begin
to piece together
how neutron stars really work.
They calculate
the diameter is just 12.4 miles,
1 mile less than
the length of Manhattan.
Nailing down
any physical characteristic
is really important.
And if there's gonna be one,
the radius is a big one,
because from there,
if you know the mass,
you can get the density.
And if you know
the overall density,
you can start to figure out
what the layering
inside of a neutron star
is like.
For physicists,
the interior of a neutron star
is one of the most intriguing
places in the universe.
You have to realize
that the conditions
inside a neutron star are very,
very different
than the conditions
that exist here on earth.
We're talking about material
that's so dense
that even the nuclei of atoms
can't hold together.
With a neutron star,
you're taking something
that weighs more than the sun,
and compressing it down
to be smaller than a city.
It's so dense that, if you
tried to put it on the ground,
it would fall
right through the Earth.
High density
means high gravity...
Gravity 200 billion times
greater than on earth.
Imagine climbing up on
a table on the surface
of a neutron star
and jumping off.
You're gonna just
get flattened instantly,
and just spread out
on that surface.
So, don't even think about
trying to do push-ups.
Added to the intense gravity
are hugely powerful
magnetic fields,
awesome X-ray radiation,
electric fields 30 million times
more powerful
than lightning bolts,
and blizzards of
high-energy particles.
This isn't a good neighborhood
for a space traveler.
If you were to
find yourself in the vicinity
of a neutron star,
it's gonna be bad news.
First, you would be torn apart
by the incredibly strong
magnetic fields.
Then, the X-ray radiation
would blast you to a crisp.
And as it pulled you closer,
its intense gravity
would stretch out
your atoms and molecules
into a long, thin stream.
You would build your speed
faster and faster,
and then, you would finally
impact the surface,
splatter across it.
And that process would
release as much energy
as a nuclear b*mb.
If I had the choice between
falling into a neutron star
versus a black hole,
I think I'd pick the black hole.
'Cause I don't really feel like
being torn apart
by a magnetic field
and blasted with x-rays.
On a cosmic scale,
neutron stars may be pint-sized,
but they sure pack
a serious punch.
The secret to
all this pent-up power
is what's going on
below the surface.
Armed with
the new kilonova data,
we can now take
a virtual journey
into the heart
of a neutron star.
First, we must pass
through its atmosphere.
Now, it's not like
the Earth's atmosphere,
which goes up,
like, a 100 miles.
On a neutron star, the
atmosphere is about this deep,
and it's extremely dense
compared to the air around us.
Below the compressed atmosphere
is a crust of ionized iron,
a mixture of
crystal iron nuclei,
and free-flowing iron electrons.
Now, the gravity's so strong
that it's almost
perfectly smooth.
The biggest mountains
on the surface
are gonna be less than
a quarter of an inch high.
A quarter-inch
mountain range may sound odd...
But things get even stranger
as we go below the surface.
This is home to the strongest
material in the universe.
It's so weird, scientists
liken it to nuclear pasta.
As we dive beneath
the crust of a neutron star,
the neutrons themselves start
to glue themselves together
into exotic shapes.
First, they form clumps that
look something like gnocchi,
then, deeper, the gnocchi
glue themselves together
to form long strands
that look like spaghetti.
Even deeper,
the spaghetti fuse together
to form sheets of lasagna.
And then, finally,
the lasagna fuse together
to become a uniform mass,
but with holes in it.
So, it looks like penne.
This is pasta, nuclear style,
simmering at a temperature
of over one million
degrees Fahrenheit.
Extreme gravity bends,
squeezes, stretches,
and buckles neutrons,
creating a material
100,000 billion times
denser than iron.
But the journey
gets even more extreme.
Even deeper is more mysterious
and harder to understand.
The core of a neutron star...
Which is very far away
from these layers,
which we call
the "nuclear pasta"...
Is perhaps the most
exotic form of matter.
So exotic it might be
the last bastion of matter
before complete gravitational
collapse into a black hole.
Data from NASA's
Chandra observatory
suggests the core
is made up of a super fluid...
A bizarre friction-free
state of matter.
Similar super fluids
produced in the lab
exhibit strange properties,
such as the ability
to flow upwards
and escape airtight containers.
Although our knowledge
of the star's interior
is still hazy,
there's not mystery
about its dazzling birth.
Forged into life during
the most spectacular event
the universe has to offer...
The expl*sive death
of a massive star.
Neutron stars...
Manhattan-sized, but with a mass
twice that of our sun.
So dense a teaspoon of their
matter weighs a billion tons.
Mind-blowing objects
that arrive with a bang.
Neutron stars spark into life
amid the death
of their parent star.
They're the ultimate story
of resurrection,
or of life from death.
It's all part of a cosmic cycle.
Stars are born from giant
clouds of very cold gas.
Those clouds collapse
under their own gravity,
and the density of the core
at the center of the collapse
starts to increase.
A star is a huge
nuclear fusion reactor.
The force of its gravity
is so powerful
that it fuses atoms together
to make progressively
heavier and heavier elements.
The star fuses hydrogen
into helium.
Once it exhausts its hydrogen,
then, if it's massive enough,
it can start fusing helium
at its core.
Fusion continues,
forming carbon,
oxygen, nitrogen,
all the way up to iron.
Once a star
has iron in the core,
it's almost like
you've poisoned it,
because this extinguishes
the nuclear reactions
in the core of the star.
You fuse something into iron,
and you get no energy.
All of a sudden,
there's nothing to support
the crush of gravity.
No radiation pressure
pushing out
means no pressure keeping the
outer regions from falling in,
and that's what they do.
As the star collapses
in its death throes,
its core becomes
the wildest, craziest,
and freakiest pressure cooker
in the whole universe.
The ingredients
are all in place.
It's time to start cooking up
a neutron star.
If we were to scale up
an atomic nucleus
to be the size of a baseball,
in a normal atom,
the nearest electron would be
way over in those trees,
but in the extreme
conditions that lead to
the formation of a neutron star,
those electrons can be pushed
closer to the nucleus.
They can come zipping in
from any direction.
And if the temperatures
and pressures are high enough,
they can even strike the nucleus
and enter it,
and they can hit a proton.
And when they do, they become
converted into more neutrons.
So, in the formation
of one of these objects,
the protons and
electrons disappear,
and you're left with
almost entirely pure neutrons,
with nothing to stop them
from cramming together
and filling up
this entire baseball
with neutrons leading to
incredibly high densities.
With the sea of electrons
now absorbed
in the atomic nuclei,
the matter in the stars can now
press together a lot tighter.
It's like squeezing
300 million tons of mass
into a single sugar cube.
As the star collapses,
enormous amounts of gas
fall towards the core.
The core is small in size,
but huge in mass.
Billions of tons of gas
bounce off of it,
then erupt into
the biggest fireworks display
in the cosmos... A supernova.
It's massive.
It's bright.
It's imposing.
Supernova are among
the most dramatic events
to happen in the universe.
A single star dying...
One star dying...
Can outshine an entire galaxy.
And arising
out of this cataclysm,
a new and very strange
cosmic entity.
When the smoke finally clears
from the supernova expl*si*n,
you're left with one of
the most real, fascinating,
unbelievable monsters
of the entire universe.
Humans have been
witnessing supernovas
for thousands of years,
but we're only now
just starting to understand
what we've truly
been witnessing...
The births of neutron stars.
But while supernovas
are big and bright,
neutron stars are small,
and many don't even
give off light.
So, how many neutron stars
are out there?
We know of about 2,000
neutron stars in our galaxy,
but there probably are many,
many, more.
I'm talking about tens of
millions in the milky way alone,
and certainly billions
throughout the universe.
Neutron stars may be small,
but some give themselves away,
sh**ting beams
across the universe...
Unmistakable, pulsing strobes
of a cosmic lighthouse.
Our knowledge of
neutron stars is expanding fast.
But we didn't even know
they existed
until a lucky discovery
just over 50 years ago.
Cambridge,
the Mullard radio observatory,
Jocelyn bell, grad student,
operating the new
radio telescope.
Scanning the sky, doing all
sorts of cool astronomy stuff,
and sees what she calls
"a bit of scruff" in the data.
This scruff is a short
but constantly repeating
burst of radiation
originating 1,000 light years
from earth.
It's so stable and regular
that bell is convinced
there's a fault
with her telescope.
She returns to that spot,
and finds a repeating,
regular signal...
A single point in the sky that
is flashing at us continually,
saying "Hi. Hi. Hi."
Blip, blip, blip.
Boom, boom, boom.
Pulse, pulse, pulse.
Nothing that we know of
in the universe,
has such a steady,
perfectly-spaced in time, pulse.
It seemed so perfect that
it must have been artificial.
It looks like
someone is making that,
but it turns out, it's not
a person, but a thing.
What she discovered
was called a "pulsar."
A pulsar is
a type of rapidly spinning
neutron star.
Neutron stars had been theorized
in the 1930s,
but were thought to be
too faint to be detected.
Neutron stars were
hypothesized to exist,
but not really taken seriously.
It was just a, "oh, that's cute.
Maybe they're out there,
but probably not."
The signal bell detected
seemed like something
from science fiction.
No one had ever seen this
in astronomy before,
and some people even speculated
that it was an alien signal.
She even called them
"LGM objects"...
"little green men."
But then,
bell found a second signal.
Little green men
went back to being fiction,
and pulsars became science fact.
The discovery of pulsars
came out of the blue.
Nobody was expecting this.
So, it was
an amazing breakthrough...
Really important.
Pulsars pulse
because they are born to spin.
They burst into life
as their parent star collapses
during a supernova.
Any object at all
that is undergoing
any sort of compression event,
if it has any initial
angular momentum at all,
it will eventually
end up spinning.
As the star shrinks,
it spins faster and faster.
They spin so quickly
because the Earth-sized core
of a massive star
collapsed to something
as small as a city.
So, because the size of the
object became so much smaller,
the rate of spin had to increase
by a tremendous amount.
Neutron stars can spin
really, really, fast.
Their surface is moving so fast.
It's moving at about 20% the
speed of light, in some cases.
So, if you were to
get on the neutron star ride...
No pregnant women, no bad backs,
no heart issues,
keep your arms and legs
inside the ride at all times,
because they are about
to be obliterated.
And as they spin, they generate
flashing beams of energy.
This beam is like
a lighthouse beam.
You see these periodic flashes
many times per second.
So, every time you see it...
Beam, beam, beam.
These beams
are the pulsar's calling card.
They're generated
by the elemental chaos
raging inside a neutron star.
Although the star
is predominantly
a ball of neutrons,
the crust is sprinkled
with protons and electrons,
spinning hundreds
of times a second,
generating an incredible
magnetic field.
And with this strong
magnetic field,
you can create strong
electric fields.
And the electric
and magnetic fields
can work off of each other
and become radiation.
These neutron stars send jets...
Beams of radiation...
Out of their spinning poles.
And if their spinning pole
is misaligned,
if they're a little bit tilted,
this beam will make circles,
across the universe.
And if we're in the path
of one of these circles,
we'll see a flash... A flash.
Just like if you're on a ship,
and you observe a distant
lighthouse in a foggy night,
you can see pulsars across
the vast expanse of space
because they are immensely
powerful beams of light.
But sometimes,
pulsars get an extra push
that accelerates
the spin even more.
The way you make it spin
even faster
is by subsequently
dumping more material onto it.
That's called "accretion,"
and you end up spinning it up
even faster than it
was already spinning.
Like stellar vampires,
pulsars are ready
to suck the life
out of any objects
that stray too close.
Gravity is bringing
that material in,
which means that any spin
it has is accelerated.
It spins faster and faster.
These millisecond pulsars
spin at around
700 revolutions per second.
They are the ultimate
kitchen blender...
They will chop, they will slice,
they will even julienne fry.
So, what stops neutron stars
from simply tearing
themselves apart?
Neutron stars are
incredibly exotic objects
with immense, immense forces
that bind them together,
and so, they can be
held rigid even against
these incredibly fast
rotation speeds.
They have
incredibly strong gravity,
and this is what allows them
to hold together
even though they're
spinning around so fast.
The speed of the spin
is hard to imagine.
On earth, a day
is 24 hours long.
On a neutron star,
it's a 700th of a second long.
Super-speeding pulsars are
not the only weird stars
that scientists
are coming to grips with.
There is one other type
of neutron star,
that has the most powerful
magnetic field in the universe.
This magnetic monster
is called a "magnetar."
Astronomers monitoring
pulsing neutron stars
have noticed something very odd.
On very rare occasions,
they can suddenly speed up.
That's amazing.
I mean, you've got this
incredibly dense object,
and suddenly,
it's spinning faster.
It happens... Instantly.
They'll suddenly
change frequency.
It would take an amazing
amount of power to do that.
What's doing it?
These sudden changes
in speed are called "glitches."
One leading idea for
what causes these glitches
is that the core material
latches onto the crust,
and this affects
the way it can spin around.
Excess material beneath
the crust cracks it open,
causing the glitch.
This process releases a
tremendous amount of radiation,
a blast of x-rays, causes
the face of the neutron star
to rearrange itself, and for
the rotation speed to change.
But there's another
possible explanation.
Glitches could also be caused
by starquakes.
Sometimes,
the crust gets ruptured.
Anything that basically changes
the geometry of the pulsar
can change the rate
at which it spins.
So,
what could be powerful enough
to cause these starquakes?
It's hard to believe
that there's any
force in the universe
that could deform the matter
inside of a neutron star,
which is undergoing
tremendous gravity.
But when it comes to
a neutron star,
if there's one thing that
can do it, it's magnetism.
Extreme magnetic fields
within the star
can get so twisted
they can rip the crust
wide open.
And so, the surface
can restructure itself,
and constantly reshape.
And just a tiny reconfiguration
of the surface
of a neutron star,
on the order of
a few millimeters,
would be associated with
an enormous release of energy.
The neutron star's
immense gravity
smooths over the star's surface
almost instantaneously.
It's like the glitch
never happened.
When it comes to neutron stars,
there is no end
to magnetic mayhem.
Meet the reigning champion
in the universal "strongest
magnetic field" competition...
The magnetar.
1 in 10 neutron stars
formed during a supernova
becomes a magnetar.
The thing about magnetars,
as is implied in their name...
The magnetic field
on them is so strong,
that even somebody who is
used to using big numbers...
Like, say, an astronomer...
Is still kind of in awe
of these things.
Magnetars have a magnetic field
one thousand trillion times
stronger than that of earth's.
This amount of magnetism
will seriously mess up
anything that comes close.
Any normal object
that we are familiar with,
if it got close to a magnetar,
it would just be shredded.
Any charged particle
with any movement at all,
would just be torn
from its atom.
It would be just
an insane situation.
Magnetars burn brightly,
but their lives are brief.
We think magnetars...
These intensely
magnetized neutron stars...
Can only be really short-lived.
Their magnetic field
is so powerful
that it should decay
over very rapid time scales,
only on the order of
a few ten thousand years.
It seems their very strength
leads to their downfall.
That magnetic field is so strong
that it's picking up material
around it, and accelerating it.
Well, that acts like a drag,
slowing it down.
So, over time, the spin
of the neutron star slows,
and the magnetic field
dies away.
During their lives,
magnetars operate very
differently than pulsars.
They don't have beams.
Their magnetic fields
sh**t out gigantic bursts
of high-intensity radiation.
But recently, astronomers
have spotted one neutron star
that's hard to classify.
It behaves like a stellar
Jekyll and Hyde.
So, this particular neutron star
is a really weird example.
It behaves both like
a radio pulsar,
and also a highly-magnetized
magnetar.
It has the extreme
magnetic fields,
it can have these
magnetic outbursts,
but it also has
this strong jet of radiation
coming out of its poles.
It's almost like it has
a split personality.
When first sighted in 2000,
this star was emitting
radio waves...
Typical pulsar behavior.
Then, 16 years later,
it stopped pulsing,
and suddenly started sending out
massive X-ray bursts...
The actions of a magnetar.
Scientists were baffled.
We don't know if this thing is a
pulsar turning into a magnetar,
or a magnetar turning
into a pulsar.
One theory is that
these X-ray bursts happened
because the star's magnetic
field suddenly twisted.
The stress became so great,
the star cracked wide open,
releasing the X-rays
from the fractured crust.
A neutron star
is the densest material
that we know of in the universe.
And yet, we've seen things
that actually make it shift
and pull apart.
This neutron star is actually
ripping itself apart
under the forces
of the magnetic field.
If this is the case,
placid neutron stars
turn into raging magnetars,
growing old disgracefully.
When you think about the
life cycle of a human being,
we seem to kind of
slow down over age,
become a little more calmer.
Neutron stars do the opposite.
They can be spinning
faster than they were
when they were formed,
and the magnetic field can
get stronger over time.
It's sort of
a reverse aging process.
But these strange
changes are extremely rare.
Most pulsars
are as regular as clockwork.
Pulsars are normally
incredibly regular.
You can literally set your watch
to the timing of their pulse.
And it's this
stability that we may use
in our future exploration
of the universe.
You know,
if you're a starship captain,
what you need is
a galactic GPS system.
Well it turns out,
neutron stars may be the answer.
Astronomers often compare
the steady flash of spinning
neutron stars, called "pulsars,"
to cosmic lighthouses.
These flashes are not only
remarkably reliable,
each pulsar has its very own
distinct flickering beam.
Each one has a slightly
different frequency.
Each one has a slightly
different rate.
Anyone in the galaxy,
no matter where you are,
can all agree on the positions
of these pulsars.
The unique signature of pulsars
opens up intriguing
possibilities
for the future of space travel.
We would
basically be using pulsars
to be able to sort of
triangulate where we're at.
And because those pulses
are so precise,
we can use that in a similar way
that we use GPS satellites
that are stationed
above the Earth.
Using pulsars
as navigational aids
is not a new idea.
It was recognized
by the NASA voyager mission
in the 1970's.
Affixed to the surface
of those spacecraft
is a golden record.
And on the plate
that covers that record
is a pulsar map,
which in principle could tell
an advanced alien civilization
how to find earth,
because it uses
the position of earth
relative to 14 known pulsars,
as, effectively,
a way to triangulate
the position of our planet
relative to all
of these pulsars.
Aliens haven't made contact,
but NASA still uses pulsar maps.
NASA recently
launched a satellite
called "nicer sextant"
that exists on the
international space station,
that is being used to test
these types of theories.
They've used pulsars
to figure out the location
of an object orbiting
around the Earth
at 17,000 miles an hour,
and they were able to
pinpoint its location
to within three miles.
That's pretty incredible.
By recognizing their position
relative to known pulsars,
future space missions
could navigate the universe.
Neutron stars are gonna take us
on this incredible journey...
Something as necessary
as knowing where you are
in the galaxy.
We could be many hundreds
of light years away,
but neutron stars
can actually show us
where in the milky way we are.
I read a lot of science fiction,
and I love the idea
of being able to go
from star to star,
planet to planet.
It's kind of weird to think
that, in the future,
as a galactic coordinate grid,
we might wind up using
these gigantic atomic nuclei,
these rapidly spinning,
bizarrely-constructed,
magnetic, fiercely gravitational
objects like neutron stars.
Neutron stars
have come a long way
since being mistaken
for little green men.
Once overlooked
as astronomical oddities,
they've now taken center stage
as genuine stellar superstars.
What's really exciting
about neutron stars is that,
we're at the beginning
of studying them.
We're not at the conclusion.
We've learned a lot,
but there's a lot more
to be learned.
From the humble neutron
comes the most powerful,
the most rapid,
the strongest magnetic field,
the most exotic objects
in the cosmos.
I love the idea of a Phoenix,
something actually rising
from its own ashes.
You think something dies,
and that's the end of the story,
but something even
more beautiful,
even more fascinating,
comes afterwards.
I told you at the beginning,
and you didn't believe me,
but now, I hope you do...
Neutron stars
are the most fascinating
astrophysical objects
in the universe.
Super heavy, super dense.
Extreme.
Gravitational, magnetic, hot.
Scary.
They destroy planets.
They can even destroy stars.
A cosmic conundrum.
They're very, very massive,
but they're also
really, really small.
Tiny cosmic super powers
long overshadowed by black holes...
Until now.
Neutron stars have
been thrust very much
to the forefront of
modern astrophysics.
The world's astronomers know
that something is happening.
Something's up, it's new,
and it's different.
Neutron stars are
the most interesting
astrophysical object
in the universe.
Now firmly in the limelight,
neutron stars, creators of
our most precious elements
and life itself.
130 million
light years form earth,
a galaxy called
"NGC-4993."
Two dead stars trapped in
a rapidly diminishing spiral.
It's like listening to the
ringing of the cosmos itself.
The sound of that collision,
if you will,
imprinted on the fabric
of space and time itself.
Livingston, Louisiana,
the advanced LiGO observatory.
Its mission...
To detect gravitational waves
generated in space.
A gravitational wave is
a distortion of space time
that's caused by, usually,
some kind of very traumatic
gravitational event.
Events such as a supernova,
or the collision of black holes,
or massive stars.
2015... LiGO makes history
by detecting gravitational waves
for the first time,
100 years after
Einstein's prediction.
It's the signature of
the crash of black holes.
It's almost like
listening to the sound
of a distant car crash
that you didn't witness.
But you're so clever,
and the sound of this car crash
is such a unique signature,
that you are able to use
your computers to model
exactly the type of cars that
must have collided together.
In 2017, LiGO picks up a
different kind of signal.
The unfolding of
the August 2017 event
was nothing short
of extraordinary.
So, the signal comes in,
and the signal is strange.
It has a long-lasting signal.
It's over 100 seconds.
Less than two seconds later,
a gamma-ray telescope
detected a flash of gamma rays
from that same part of the sky.
And very quickly,
the world's astronomers
know that something
is happening.
Something's up, it's new,
and it's different.
This combination of
a long gravitational wave signal
and a blaze of gamma rays...
Acts as a beacon
for astronomers.
When they saw this event,
they sent out a worldwide alert
to astronomers
across the globe, saying,
"hey, we saw
something interesting,
and it came from
a particular patch of sky.
Then, all the chatter started
amongst the
astronomical community,
and everyone starting
pointing their telescopes
at this one part of the sky.
Within hours,
thousands of astronomers
and physicists across the globe
are frantically
collecting data
on this mysterious event.
There is not just
the gravitational waves,
there is not just
the gamma rays.
There's a visible light,
there's infrared light,
there's ultraviolet light.
And all these signals together
tell us a story.
And this was the very first time
we've seen these two
multiple messengers at once...
Gravitational waves
and regular light.
So, that was a groundbreaking
moment for astronomy.
Scientists realize
this isn't another
black-hole collision.
This is something different.
When you see an expl*si*n
in the universe,
there aren't exactly
a lot of candidates.
There's not a lot of things
in the universe that blow up.
But the length of
the signal is the smoking g*n.
The collision
of two black holes was quick.
This one was the longer,
slower, death end-spiral
of two neutron stars.
Spiraling in,
closer and closer, speeding up.
And then, when they
finally collide,
when they finally touch,
releasing a tremendous
amount of energy
into the surrounding system.
The collision
throws up huge clouds of matter,
which may have slowed down
the light very slightly.
The light
and gravitational waves
travel for 130 million years,
arriving at earth
almost simultaneously.
It's the first time astronomers
see neutron stars collide.
They call it a "kilonova."
And this spectacular
cosmic event
doesn't just release energy.
The aftermath of this
neutron-star collision,
this kilonova, created
a tremendous amount of debris,
which blasted out into space.
And this may finally
have provided us
the evidence of where
some very special
heavy elements are created.
Through the destruction of
a neutron star comes the seeds
for the essential ingredients
of life itself.
We breathe oxygen
molecules... O2.
Water is hydrogen and oxygen.
Most of our body is made up
of carbon compounds
that include nitrogen,
phosphorus.
One of the big questions
in science
over the history of humanity
has been,
"what are the origins
of these elements?"
And it turns out that neutron
stars play a critical role
in creating many of
the heavy elements.
Most of the elements
on earth are made in stars.
But how the heaviest
elements are made
has been one of science's
longest-running mysteries.
For a long time,
we knew there was a problem
with making these
heavier atoms...
Things like gold and platinum,
all the way out towards uranium.
And really, the most
energetic thing we had
in the universe
was supernova explosions.
So, they had to be created
somehow in supernovas.
But when scientists
ran computer simulations,
virtual supernovas failed to
forge these oversized atoms.
In 2016, astronomer
Edo Berger explained
a potential solution
to the mystery.
If you open
any one of these books,
and flip to the page that
tells you where gold came from,
it will tell you that gold
came from supernova explosions.
But it was becoming clear that
the textbooks were out of date.
To form heavy elements
requires a lot of neutrons,
and so, another possible
theory was that
the heaviest elements
were produced in the mergers
of two neutron stars
in a binary system.
But at the time,
no one had actually seen
a neutron-star collision.
It was difficult
to convince the community
that this was
a potential channel
for the production
of heavy elements.
The proof is to actually
see this process
happening in the universe.
The 2017 kilonova
provides the
perfect opportunity.
It generates thousands
of hours of data.
Scientists notice a pattern...
Subtle changes in the color
of the kilonova remnants.
In space, when you have
an event that is very bright,
it emits a certain
amount of light,
and it emits it at
certain wavelengths...
What we think of as colors.
Different colors
in a pyrotechnics display
indicate the use of different
chemicals in fireworks.
In the same way, scientists
can uncover the elements
in the kilonova
by the colors in the expl*si*n.
As the kilonova turns red,
they realize it's the result
of newly-created heavy elements
starting to absorb blue light.
As we watched
this remnant change...
The expl*si*n change in
color, expand and cool...
We could estimate what sort of
elements were being produced.
The light from the debris shifts
from blue and Violet
to red and infrared.
The color change provides clues
about the presence
of certain heavy metals.
Well, this neutron-star
collision, this kilonova,
produced brightness
and a color spectrum
that are consistent
with models of predictions
that produce gold and platinum.
This model
is called "The R-process,"
short for
"rapid neutron capture."
That is a bit of
a complicated term
that describes how we make atoms
heavier than iron.
You need a really
neutron-rich environment.
And as you might imagine,
a neutron-star collision
is a very neutron-rich
environment.
If these models are correct...
And this blows me away...
This collision, this kilonova,
produced several dozen times
the mass of the Earth
in just gold.
The 2017 kilonova
not only reveals
the origin of key elements,
it sheds light on
the neutron star's interior...
The strongest material
in the universe
creating a magnetic field
a trillion times greater
than that of earth.
Two neutron stars
caught in a death spiral.
This massive kilonova expl*si*n
not only sheds light
on the creation
of heavy elements,
such as gold and platinum,
it also provides scientists
with a unique insight
into one of the most mysterious
objects in the universe.
Trying to imagine what
a neutron star is really like
really challenges
our imagination.
It also challenges
our theoretical physics.
We have to go to our computer
models, our mathematics,
to have some estimate
of what this might be like.
Now,
scientists don't have to rely
on their imaginations.
They can use hard data
from the kilonova
to work out what makes
neutron stars tick.
There's so much information
we got from observing
that one single event, that one
colliding neutron star pair.
Now, for the first time,
we have an accurate estimate
of the mass of a neutron star,
and the diameter.
We can finally begin
to piece together
how neutron stars really work.
They calculate
the diameter is just 12.4 miles,
1 mile less than
the length of Manhattan.
Nailing down
any physical characteristic
is really important.
And if there's gonna be one,
the radius is a big one,
because from there,
if you know the mass,
you can get the density.
And if you know
the overall density,
you can start to figure out
what the layering
inside of a neutron star
is like.
For physicists,
the interior of a neutron star
is one of the most intriguing
places in the universe.
You have to realize
that the conditions
inside a neutron star are very,
very different
than the conditions
that exist here on earth.
We're talking about material
that's so dense
that even the nuclei of atoms
can't hold together.
With a neutron star,
you're taking something
that weighs more than the sun,
and compressing it down
to be smaller than a city.
It's so dense that, if you
tried to put it on the ground,
it would fall
right through the Earth.
High density
means high gravity...
Gravity 200 billion times
greater than on earth.
Imagine climbing up on
a table on the surface
of a neutron star
and jumping off.
You're gonna just
get flattened instantly,
and just spread out
on that surface.
So, don't even think about
trying to do push-ups.
Added to the intense gravity
are hugely powerful
magnetic fields,
awesome X-ray radiation,
electric fields 30 million times
more powerful
than lightning bolts,
and blizzards of
high-energy particles.
This isn't a good neighborhood
for a space traveler.
If you were to
find yourself in the vicinity
of a neutron star,
it's gonna be bad news.
First, you would be torn apart
by the incredibly strong
magnetic fields.
Then, the X-ray radiation
would blast you to a crisp.
And as it pulled you closer,
its intense gravity
would stretch out
your atoms and molecules
into a long, thin stream.
You would build your speed
faster and faster,
and then, you would finally
impact the surface,
splatter across it.
And that process would
release as much energy
as a nuclear b*mb.
If I had the choice between
falling into a neutron star
versus a black hole,
I think I'd pick the black hole.
'Cause I don't really feel like
being torn apart
by a magnetic field
and blasted with x-rays.
On a cosmic scale,
neutron stars may be pint-sized,
but they sure pack
a serious punch.
The secret to
all this pent-up power
is what's going on
below the surface.
Armed with
the new kilonova data,
we can now take
a virtual journey
into the heart
of a neutron star.
First, we must pass
through its atmosphere.
Now, it's not like
the Earth's atmosphere,
which goes up,
like, a 100 miles.
On a neutron star, the
atmosphere is about this deep,
and it's extremely dense
compared to the air around us.
Below the compressed atmosphere
is a crust of ionized iron,
a mixture of
crystal iron nuclei,
and free-flowing iron electrons.
Now, the gravity's so strong
that it's almost
perfectly smooth.
The biggest mountains
on the surface
are gonna be less than
a quarter of an inch high.
A quarter-inch
mountain range may sound odd...
But things get even stranger
as we go below the surface.
This is home to the strongest
material in the universe.
It's so weird, scientists
liken it to nuclear pasta.
As we dive beneath
the crust of a neutron star,
the neutrons themselves start
to glue themselves together
into exotic shapes.
First, they form clumps that
look something like gnocchi,
then, deeper, the gnocchi
glue themselves together
to form long strands
that look like spaghetti.
Even deeper,
the spaghetti fuse together
to form sheets of lasagna.
And then, finally,
the lasagna fuse together
to become a uniform mass,
but with holes in it.
So, it looks like penne.
This is pasta, nuclear style,
simmering at a temperature
of over one million
degrees Fahrenheit.
Extreme gravity bends,
squeezes, stretches,
and buckles neutrons,
creating a material
100,000 billion times
denser than iron.
But the journey
gets even more extreme.
Even deeper is more mysterious
and harder to understand.
The core of a neutron star...
Which is very far away
from these layers,
which we call
the "nuclear pasta"...
Is perhaps the most
exotic form of matter.
So exotic it might be
the last bastion of matter
before complete gravitational
collapse into a black hole.
Data from NASA's
Chandra observatory
suggests the core
is made up of a super fluid...
A bizarre friction-free
state of matter.
Similar super fluids
produced in the lab
exhibit strange properties,
such as the ability
to flow upwards
and escape airtight containers.
Although our knowledge
of the star's interior
is still hazy,
there's not mystery
about its dazzling birth.
Forged into life during
the most spectacular event
the universe has to offer...
The expl*sive death
of a massive star.
Neutron stars...
Manhattan-sized, but with a mass
twice that of our sun.
So dense a teaspoon of their
matter weighs a billion tons.
Mind-blowing objects
that arrive with a bang.
Neutron stars spark into life
amid the death
of their parent star.
They're the ultimate story
of resurrection,
or of life from death.
It's all part of a cosmic cycle.
Stars are born from giant
clouds of very cold gas.
Those clouds collapse
under their own gravity,
and the density of the core
at the center of the collapse
starts to increase.
A star is a huge
nuclear fusion reactor.
The force of its gravity
is so powerful
that it fuses atoms together
to make progressively
heavier and heavier elements.
The star fuses hydrogen
into helium.
Once it exhausts its hydrogen,
then, if it's massive enough,
it can start fusing helium
at its core.
Fusion continues,
forming carbon,
oxygen, nitrogen,
all the way up to iron.
Once a star
has iron in the core,
it's almost like
you've poisoned it,
because this extinguishes
the nuclear reactions
in the core of the star.
You fuse something into iron,
and you get no energy.
All of a sudden,
there's nothing to support
the crush of gravity.
No radiation pressure
pushing out
means no pressure keeping the
outer regions from falling in,
and that's what they do.
As the star collapses
in its death throes,
its core becomes
the wildest, craziest,
and freakiest pressure cooker
in the whole universe.
The ingredients
are all in place.
It's time to start cooking up
a neutron star.
If we were to scale up
an atomic nucleus
to be the size of a baseball,
in a normal atom,
the nearest electron would be
way over in those trees,
but in the extreme
conditions that lead to
the formation of a neutron star,
those electrons can be pushed
closer to the nucleus.
They can come zipping in
from any direction.
And if the temperatures
and pressures are high enough,
they can even strike the nucleus
and enter it,
and they can hit a proton.
And when they do, they become
converted into more neutrons.
So, in the formation
of one of these objects,
the protons and
electrons disappear,
and you're left with
almost entirely pure neutrons,
with nothing to stop them
from cramming together
and filling up
this entire baseball
with neutrons leading to
incredibly high densities.
With the sea of electrons
now absorbed
in the atomic nuclei,
the matter in the stars can now
press together a lot tighter.
It's like squeezing
300 million tons of mass
into a single sugar cube.
As the star collapses,
enormous amounts of gas
fall towards the core.
The core is small in size,
but huge in mass.
Billions of tons of gas
bounce off of it,
then erupt into
the biggest fireworks display
in the cosmos... A supernova.
It's massive.
It's bright.
It's imposing.
Supernova are among
the most dramatic events
to happen in the universe.
A single star dying...
One star dying...
Can outshine an entire galaxy.
And arising
out of this cataclysm,
a new and very strange
cosmic entity.
When the smoke finally clears
from the supernova expl*si*n,
you're left with one of
the most real, fascinating,
unbelievable monsters
of the entire universe.
Humans have been
witnessing supernovas
for thousands of years,
but we're only now
just starting to understand
what we've truly
been witnessing...
The births of neutron stars.
But while supernovas
are big and bright,
neutron stars are small,
and many don't even
give off light.
So, how many neutron stars
are out there?
We know of about 2,000
neutron stars in our galaxy,
but there probably are many,
many, more.
I'm talking about tens of
millions in the milky way alone,
and certainly billions
throughout the universe.
Neutron stars may be small,
but some give themselves away,
sh**ting beams
across the universe...
Unmistakable, pulsing strobes
of a cosmic lighthouse.
Our knowledge of
neutron stars is expanding fast.
But we didn't even know
they existed
until a lucky discovery
just over 50 years ago.
Cambridge,
the Mullard radio observatory,
Jocelyn bell, grad student,
operating the new
radio telescope.
Scanning the sky, doing all
sorts of cool astronomy stuff,
and sees what she calls
"a bit of scruff" in the data.
This scruff is a short
but constantly repeating
burst of radiation
originating 1,000 light years
from earth.
It's so stable and regular
that bell is convinced
there's a fault
with her telescope.
She returns to that spot,
and finds a repeating,
regular signal...
A single point in the sky that
is flashing at us continually,
saying "Hi. Hi. Hi."
Blip, blip, blip.
Boom, boom, boom.
Pulse, pulse, pulse.
Nothing that we know of
in the universe,
has such a steady,
perfectly-spaced in time, pulse.
It seemed so perfect that
it must have been artificial.
It looks like
someone is making that,
but it turns out, it's not
a person, but a thing.
What she discovered
was called a "pulsar."
A pulsar is
a type of rapidly spinning
neutron star.
Neutron stars had been theorized
in the 1930s,
but were thought to be
too faint to be detected.
Neutron stars were
hypothesized to exist,
but not really taken seriously.
It was just a, "oh, that's cute.
Maybe they're out there,
but probably not."
The signal bell detected
seemed like something
from science fiction.
No one had ever seen this
in astronomy before,
and some people even speculated
that it was an alien signal.
She even called them
"LGM objects"...
"little green men."
But then,
bell found a second signal.
Little green men
went back to being fiction,
and pulsars became science fact.
The discovery of pulsars
came out of the blue.
Nobody was expecting this.
So, it was
an amazing breakthrough...
Really important.
Pulsars pulse
because they are born to spin.
They burst into life
as their parent star collapses
during a supernova.
Any object at all
that is undergoing
any sort of compression event,
if it has any initial
angular momentum at all,
it will eventually
end up spinning.
As the star shrinks,
it spins faster and faster.
They spin so quickly
because the Earth-sized core
of a massive star
collapsed to something
as small as a city.
So, because the size of the
object became so much smaller,
the rate of spin had to increase
by a tremendous amount.
Neutron stars can spin
really, really, fast.
Their surface is moving so fast.
It's moving at about 20% the
speed of light, in some cases.
So, if you were to
get on the neutron star ride...
No pregnant women, no bad backs,
no heart issues,
keep your arms and legs
inside the ride at all times,
because they are about
to be obliterated.
And as they spin, they generate
flashing beams of energy.
This beam is like
a lighthouse beam.
You see these periodic flashes
many times per second.
So, every time you see it...
Beam, beam, beam.
These beams
are the pulsar's calling card.
They're generated
by the elemental chaos
raging inside a neutron star.
Although the star
is predominantly
a ball of neutrons,
the crust is sprinkled
with protons and electrons,
spinning hundreds
of times a second,
generating an incredible
magnetic field.
And with this strong
magnetic field,
you can create strong
electric fields.
And the electric
and magnetic fields
can work off of each other
and become radiation.
These neutron stars send jets...
Beams of radiation...
Out of their spinning poles.
And if their spinning pole
is misaligned,
if they're a little bit tilted,
this beam will make circles,
across the universe.
And if we're in the path
of one of these circles,
we'll see a flash... A flash.
Just like if you're on a ship,
and you observe a distant
lighthouse in a foggy night,
you can see pulsars across
the vast expanse of space
because they are immensely
powerful beams of light.
But sometimes,
pulsars get an extra push
that accelerates
the spin even more.
The way you make it spin
even faster
is by subsequently
dumping more material onto it.
That's called "accretion,"
and you end up spinning it up
even faster than it
was already spinning.
Like stellar vampires,
pulsars are ready
to suck the life
out of any objects
that stray too close.
Gravity is bringing
that material in,
which means that any spin
it has is accelerated.
It spins faster and faster.
These millisecond pulsars
spin at around
700 revolutions per second.
They are the ultimate
kitchen blender...
They will chop, they will slice,
they will even julienne fry.
So, what stops neutron stars
from simply tearing
themselves apart?
Neutron stars are
incredibly exotic objects
with immense, immense forces
that bind them together,
and so, they can be
held rigid even against
these incredibly fast
rotation speeds.
They have
incredibly strong gravity,
and this is what allows them
to hold together
even though they're
spinning around so fast.
The speed of the spin
is hard to imagine.
On earth, a day
is 24 hours long.
On a neutron star,
it's a 700th of a second long.
Super-speeding pulsars are
not the only weird stars
that scientists
are coming to grips with.
There is one other type
of neutron star,
that has the most powerful
magnetic field in the universe.
This magnetic monster
is called a "magnetar."
Astronomers monitoring
pulsing neutron stars
have noticed something very odd.
On very rare occasions,
they can suddenly speed up.
That's amazing.
I mean, you've got this
incredibly dense object,
and suddenly,
it's spinning faster.
It happens... Instantly.
They'll suddenly
change frequency.
It would take an amazing
amount of power to do that.
What's doing it?
These sudden changes
in speed are called "glitches."
One leading idea for
what causes these glitches
is that the core material
latches onto the crust,
and this affects
the way it can spin around.
Excess material beneath
the crust cracks it open,
causing the glitch.
This process releases a
tremendous amount of radiation,
a blast of x-rays, causes
the face of the neutron star
to rearrange itself, and for
the rotation speed to change.
But there's another
possible explanation.
Glitches could also be caused
by starquakes.
Sometimes,
the crust gets ruptured.
Anything that basically changes
the geometry of the pulsar
can change the rate
at which it spins.
So,
what could be powerful enough
to cause these starquakes?
It's hard to believe
that there's any
force in the universe
that could deform the matter
inside of a neutron star,
which is undergoing
tremendous gravity.
But when it comes to
a neutron star,
if there's one thing that
can do it, it's magnetism.
Extreme magnetic fields
within the star
can get so twisted
they can rip the crust
wide open.
And so, the surface
can restructure itself,
and constantly reshape.
And just a tiny reconfiguration
of the surface
of a neutron star,
on the order of
a few millimeters,
would be associated with
an enormous release of energy.
The neutron star's
immense gravity
smooths over the star's surface
almost instantaneously.
It's like the glitch
never happened.
When it comes to neutron stars,
there is no end
to magnetic mayhem.
Meet the reigning champion
in the universal "strongest
magnetic field" competition...
The magnetar.
1 in 10 neutron stars
formed during a supernova
becomes a magnetar.
The thing about magnetars,
as is implied in their name...
The magnetic field
on them is so strong,
that even somebody who is
used to using big numbers...
Like, say, an astronomer...
Is still kind of in awe
of these things.
Magnetars have a magnetic field
one thousand trillion times
stronger than that of earth's.
This amount of magnetism
will seriously mess up
anything that comes close.
Any normal object
that we are familiar with,
if it got close to a magnetar,
it would just be shredded.
Any charged particle
with any movement at all,
would just be torn
from its atom.
It would be just
an insane situation.
Magnetars burn brightly,
but their lives are brief.
We think magnetars...
These intensely
magnetized neutron stars...
Can only be really short-lived.
Their magnetic field
is so powerful
that it should decay
over very rapid time scales,
only on the order of
a few ten thousand years.
It seems their very strength
leads to their downfall.
That magnetic field is so strong
that it's picking up material
around it, and accelerating it.
Well, that acts like a drag,
slowing it down.
So, over time, the spin
of the neutron star slows,
and the magnetic field
dies away.
During their lives,
magnetars operate very
differently than pulsars.
They don't have beams.
Their magnetic fields
sh**t out gigantic bursts
of high-intensity radiation.
But recently, astronomers
have spotted one neutron star
that's hard to classify.
It behaves like a stellar
Jekyll and Hyde.
So, this particular neutron star
is a really weird example.
It behaves both like
a radio pulsar,
and also a highly-magnetized
magnetar.
It has the extreme
magnetic fields,
it can have these
magnetic outbursts,
but it also has
this strong jet of radiation
coming out of its poles.
It's almost like it has
a split personality.
When first sighted in 2000,
this star was emitting
radio waves...
Typical pulsar behavior.
Then, 16 years later,
it stopped pulsing,
and suddenly started sending out
massive X-ray bursts...
The actions of a magnetar.
Scientists were baffled.
We don't know if this thing is a
pulsar turning into a magnetar,
or a magnetar turning
into a pulsar.
One theory is that
these X-ray bursts happened
because the star's magnetic
field suddenly twisted.
The stress became so great,
the star cracked wide open,
releasing the X-rays
from the fractured crust.
A neutron star
is the densest material
that we know of in the universe.
And yet, we've seen things
that actually make it shift
and pull apart.
This neutron star is actually
ripping itself apart
under the forces
of the magnetic field.
If this is the case,
placid neutron stars
turn into raging magnetars,
growing old disgracefully.
When you think about the
life cycle of a human being,
we seem to kind of
slow down over age,
become a little more calmer.
Neutron stars do the opposite.
They can be spinning
faster than they were
when they were formed,
and the magnetic field can
get stronger over time.
It's sort of
a reverse aging process.
But these strange
changes are extremely rare.
Most pulsars
are as regular as clockwork.
Pulsars are normally
incredibly regular.
You can literally set your watch
to the timing of their pulse.
And it's this
stability that we may use
in our future exploration
of the universe.
You know,
if you're a starship captain,
what you need is
a galactic GPS system.
Well it turns out,
neutron stars may be the answer.
Astronomers often compare
the steady flash of spinning
neutron stars, called "pulsars,"
to cosmic lighthouses.
These flashes are not only
remarkably reliable,
each pulsar has its very own
distinct flickering beam.
Each one has a slightly
different frequency.
Each one has a slightly
different rate.
Anyone in the galaxy,
no matter where you are,
can all agree on the positions
of these pulsars.
The unique signature of pulsars
opens up intriguing
possibilities
for the future of space travel.
We would
basically be using pulsars
to be able to sort of
triangulate where we're at.
And because those pulses
are so precise,
we can use that in a similar way
that we use GPS satellites
that are stationed
above the Earth.
Using pulsars
as navigational aids
is not a new idea.
It was recognized
by the NASA voyager mission
in the 1970's.
Affixed to the surface
of those spacecraft
is a golden record.
And on the plate
that covers that record
is a pulsar map,
which in principle could tell
an advanced alien civilization
how to find earth,
because it uses
the position of earth
relative to 14 known pulsars,
as, effectively,
a way to triangulate
the position of our planet
relative to all
of these pulsars.
Aliens haven't made contact,
but NASA still uses pulsar maps.
NASA recently
launched a satellite
called "nicer sextant"
that exists on the
international space station,
that is being used to test
these types of theories.
They've used pulsars
to figure out the location
of an object orbiting
around the Earth
at 17,000 miles an hour,
and they were able to
pinpoint its location
to within three miles.
That's pretty incredible.
By recognizing their position
relative to known pulsars,
future space missions
could navigate the universe.
Neutron stars are gonna take us
on this incredible journey...
Something as necessary
as knowing where you are
in the galaxy.
We could be many hundreds
of light years away,
but neutron stars
can actually show us
where in the milky way we are.
I read a lot of science fiction,
and I love the idea
of being able to go
from star to star,
planet to planet.
It's kind of weird to think
that, in the future,
as a galactic coordinate grid,
we might wind up using
these gigantic atomic nuclei,
these rapidly spinning,
bizarrely-constructed,
magnetic, fiercely gravitational
objects like neutron stars.
Neutron stars
have come a long way
since being mistaken
for little green men.
Once overlooked
as astronomical oddities,
they've now taken center stage
as genuine stellar superstars.
What's really exciting
about neutron stars is that,
we're at the beginning
of studying them.
We're not at the conclusion.
We've learned a lot,
but there's a lot more
to be learned.
From the humble neutron
comes the most powerful,
the most rapid,
the strongest magnetic field,
the most exotic objects
in the cosmos.
I love the idea of a Phoenix,
something actually rising
from its own ashes.
You think something dies,
and that's the end of the story,
but something even
more beautiful,
even more fascinating,
comes afterwards.
I told you at the beginning,
and you didn't believe me,
but now, I hope you do...
Neutron stars
are the most fascinating
astrophysical objects
in the universe.