Washington D.C. [USA], When Jocelyn Bell first observed the emissions of a pulsar in 1967, the rhythmic pulses of radio waves so confounded astronomers that they considered whether the light could be signals sent by an alien civilization.
The stars act like stellar lighthouses, shooting beams of radio waves from their magnetic poles. For more than a half-century, the cause of those beams has confounded scientists. Now a team of researchers suspects that they've finally identified the mechanism responsible.
The discovery could aid projects that rely on the timing of pulsar emissions, such as studies of gravitational waves. The researchers' proposal starts with the pulsar's strong electric fields, which tear electrons from the star's surface and accelerate them to extreme energies.
The accelerated electrons eventually begin emitting high-energy gamma rays. These gamma rays, when absorbed by the pulsar's ultra-strong magnetic field, produce a deluge of additional electrons and their antimatter counterparts, positrons. The newborn charged particles dampen the electric fields, causing them to oscillate.
The wobbling electric fields in the presence of the pulsar's powerful magnetic fields then result in electromagnetic waves that escape into space. Using plasma simulations, the researchers found that these electromagnetic waves match radio waves observed from pulsars.
"The process is a lot like lightning," says study lead author Alexander Philippov, an associate research scientist at the Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Astrophysics in New York City. "Out of nowhere, you have a powerful discharge producing a cloud of electrons and positrons, and then, like an afterglow, there are electromagnetic waves." Philippov and collaborators Andrey Timokhin of the University of Zielona Gora in Poland and Anatoly Spitkovsky of Princeton University present their findings in Physical Review Letters.
Pulsars are neutron stars, the dense and highly magnetized remains of collapsed stars. Unlike other neutron stars, pulsars spin at dizzying speeds, with some rotating more than 700 times each second. That spinning generates powerful electric fields. At a pulsar's two magnetic poles, continuous beams of radio waves blast into space.
These radio emissions are special in that they are coherent, meaning the particles creating them move in lockstep with one another. As the pulsar rotates, the beams sweep in circles across the sky. From Earth, pulsars appear to blink as the beams move in and out of our line of sight. The timing of these blinks is so precise that they rival the accuracy of atomic clocks.
For decades, astronomers pondered the origins of these beams but failed to produce a viable explanation. Philippov, Timokhin and Spitkovsky took a fresh approach to the problem by creating 2D simulations of the plasma surrounding a pulsar's magnetic poles (previous simulations were only 1D, which can't show electromagnetic waves).