Researchers observe "cosmic hiccups" of Bursting Pulsar
Astronomers from the University of Southampton have found a rare class of neutron star that has a tendency to ââ¬Ëhiccupââ¬â¢ as it strips mater from its stellar neighbour.
Jamie Court, a postgraduate researcher in Southamptonââ¬â¢s Department of Physics and Astronomy, published observations of the Bursting Pulsar - GRO J1744-28 ââ¬â in a new paper of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Using archived data from NASA's orbiting RXTE observatory, Jamie found that a constantly shifting fight between the starââ¬â¢s infalling gas and magnetic field causes matter to be swallowed in discrete 'gulps' or 'hiccups'.
The research also observed that the Bursting Pulsar may be the slowest known ââ¬Ëtransitional pulsarââ¬â¢ in existence.
ââ¬ÅThis exciting discovery will allow us to explore the messy physics of these cosmic hiccups in a more extreme environment than ever before,ââ¬Â he explains.