Discovery Signals from the
first discovered pulsar were initially observed by
Jocelyn Bell while analyzing data recorded on August 6, 1967, from a
newly commissioned radio telescope that she helped build. Initially dismissed as
radio interference by her supervisor and developer of the telescope,
Antony Hewish, the fact that the signals always appeared at the same
declination and
right ascension soon ruled out a terrestrial source. No astronomical object of this nature had ever been observed before. On December 21, Bell discovered a second pulsar, quashing speculation that these might be signals beamed at Earth from an
extraterrestrial intelligence. When observations with another telescope confirmed the emission, it eliminated any sort of instrumental effects. At this point, Bell said of herself and Hewish that "we did not really believe that we had picked up signals from another civilization, but obviously the idea had crossed our minds and we had no proof that it was an entirely natural radio emission. It is an interesting problem—if one thinks one may have detected life elsewhere in the universe, how does one announce the results responsibly?" Even so, they nicknamed the signal
LGM-1, for "
little green men" (a playful name for intelligent
beings of extraterrestrial origin). first recognised evidence of a pulsar, exhibited at
Cambridge University Library It was not until a second pulsating source was discovered in a different part of the sky that the "LGM hypothesis" was entirely abandoned. Their pulsar was later dubbed
CP 1919, and is now known by a number of designators including PSR B1919+21 and PSR J1921+2153. Although CP 1919 emits in
radio wavelengths, pulsars have subsequently been found to emit in visible light,
X-ray, and
gamma ray wavelengths. The word
pulsar first appeared in print in 1968: , showing
synchrotron emission in the surrounding
pulsar wind nebula, powered by injection of magnetic fields and particles from the central pulsar The existence of neutron stars was first proposed by
Walter Baade and
Fritz Zwicky in 1934, when they argued that a small, dense star consisting primarily of neutrons would result from a
supernova. Based on the idea of magnetic flux conservation from magnetic main sequence stars,
Lodewijk Woltjer proposed in 1964 that such neutron stars might contain magnetic fields as large as 1014 to 1016
gauss (=1010 to 1012
tesla). In 1967, shortly before the discovery of pulsars,
Franco Pacini suggested that a rotating neutron star with a magnetic field would emit radiation, and even noted that such energy could be pumped into a
supernova remnant around a neutron star, such as the
Crab Nebula. After the discovery of the first pulsar,
Thomas Gold independently suggested a rotating neutron star model similar to that of Pacini, and explicitly argued that this model could explain the pulsed radiation observed by Bell Burnell and Hewish. In 1968,
Richard V. E. Lovelace with collaborators discovered period P \approx 33 ms of the
Crab Nebula Pulsar using
Arecibo Observatory. The discovery of the
Crab Pulsar provided confirmation of the rotating neutron star model of pulsars. The Crab Pulsar 33-
millisecond pulse period was too short to be consistent with other proposed models for pulsar emission. Moreover, the Crab Pulsar is so named because it is located at the center of the Crab Nebula, consistent with the 1933 prediction of Baade and Zwicky. In 1974, Antony Hewish and
Martin Ryle, who had developed revolutionary
radio telescopes, became the first astronomers to be awarded the
Nobel Prize in Physics, with the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences noting that Hewish played a "decisive role in the discovery of pulsars". Considerable controversy is associated with the fact that Hewish was awarded the prize while Bell, who made the initial discovery while she was his PhD student, was not. Bell claims no bitterness upon this point, supporting the decision of the Nobel prize committee.
Milestones and its surrounding
pulsar wind nebula In 1974,
Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr. and
Russell Hulse discovered for the first time a pulsar in a
binary system of stars,
PSR B1913+16. This pulsar orbits another neutron star with an orbital period of just eight hours.
Einstein's theory of
general relativity predicts that this system should emit strong
gravitational radiation, causing the orbit to continually contract as it loses
orbital energy. Observations of the pulsar soon confirmed this prediction, providing the first ever evidence of the existence of gravitational waves. As of 2010, observations of this pulsar continue to agree with general relativity. In 1993, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Taylor and Hulse for the discovery of this pulsar. In 1982,
Don Backer led a group that discovered
PSR B1937+21, a pulsar with a rotation period of just about 1.6 milliseconds (38,500
rpm). Observations soon revealed that its magnetic field was much weaker than ordinary pulsars, while further discoveries cemented the idea that a new class of object, the "
millisecond pulsars" (MSPs) had been found. MSPs are believed to be the end product of
X-ray binaries. Owing to their extraordinarily rapid and stable rotation, MSPs can be used by
astronomers as clocks rivaling the stability of the best
atomic clocks on Earth. Factors affecting the arrival time of pulses at Earth by more than a few hundred
nanoseconds can be easily detected and used to make precise measurements. Physical parameters accessible through pulsar timing include the 3D position of the pulsar, its
proper motion, the
electron content of the
interstellar medium along the propagation path, the orbital parameters of any binary companion, the pulsar rotation period and its evolution with time. (These are computed from the raw timing data by
Tempo, a computer program specialized for this task.) After these factors have been taken into account, deviations between the observed arrival times and predictions made using these parameters can be found and attributed to one of three possibilities: intrinsic variations in the spin period of the pulsar, errors in the realization of
Terrestrial Time against which arrival times were measured, or the presence of background gravitational waves. Scientists are currently attempting to resolve these possibilities by comparing the deviations seen between several different pulsars, forming what is known as a
pulsar timing array. The goal of these efforts is to develop a pulsar-based
time standard precise enough to make the first ever direct detection of gravitational waves. In 2006, a team of astronomers at
LANL proposed a model to predict the likely date of
pulsar glitches with observational data from the
Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. They used observations of the pulsar
PSR J0537−6910, that is known to be a quasi-periodic glitching pulsar. However, no general scheme for glitch forecast is known to date. . The one in the foreground is planet
C. In 1992,
Aleksander Wolszczan discovered the first
extrasolar planets around
PSR B1257+12. This discovery presented important evidence concerning the widespread existence of planets outside the
Solar System, although it is very unlikely that any
life form could survive in the environment of intense radiation near a pulsar. == Pulsar-like white dwarfs ==