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ANN ARBOR, Mich.---Einstein's predicted distortion of space-time occurs
around neutron stars, University of Michigan astronomers and others have
observed. Using European and Japanese/NASA X-ray observatory satellites,
teams of researchers have pioneered a groundbreaking technique for
determining the properties of these ultradense objects.
Neutron stars contain the densest observable matter in the universe.
They cram more than a sun's worth of material into a city-sized sphere,
meaning a few cups of neutron-star stuff would outweigh Mount Everest.
Astronomers use these collapsed stars as natural laboratories to study how
tightly matter can be crammed under the most extreme pressures nature can
offer.
Researchers who study neutron stars are seeking answers to fundamental
physics questions. Their centers could hold exotic particles or states of
matter that are impossible to create in a lab.
The first step in addressing these mysteries is to accurately and
precisely measure the diameters and masses of neutron stars. A U-M study
is one of two that have recently done just that.
Like neutron stars themselves, the region around these stars is also
extreme. The motions of gas in this environment are described by
Einstein's general theory of relativity. Scientists are now exploiting
general relativity to study neutron stars.
U-M research fellow Edward Cackett and assistant professor Jon Miller
are lead authors of a paper on the research that has been submitted to
Astrophysical Journal Letters. Independent work reported by Sudip
Bhattacharyya and Tod Strohmayer of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
bolsters the results reported by Cackett and Miller, and together the
results signal that an accessible new method for probing neutron stars has
been found.
NASA describes the findings as "a big step forward."
Cackett and Miller used the Japanese/NASA Suzaku X-ray observatory
satellite to survey three neutron-star binaries: Serpens X-1, GX 349+2,
and 4U 1820-30. The team studied the spectral lines from hot iron atoms
that are whirling around in a disk just beyond the neutron stars' surface
at 40 percent light speed.
Previous X-ray observatories detected iron lines around neutron stars,
but they lacked the sensitivity to measure the shapes of the lines in
detail.
Cackett and Miller, along with the Goddard astronomers, were able to
determine that the iron line is broadened asymmetrically by the gas's
extreme velocity. The line is smeared and distorted because of the Doppler
effect and beaming effects predicted by Einstein's special theory of
relativity. The warping of space-time by the neutron star's powerful
gravity, an effect of Einstein's general theory of relativity, shifts the
neutron star's iron line to longer wavelengths.
The iron line Cackett and Miller observed in Serpens X-1 was nearly
identical to the one Bhattacharyya and Strohmayer observed with a
different satellite: the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton. In the other
star systems, Cackett and Miller observed similarly-skewed iron lines.
"We're seeing the gas whipping around just outside the neutron star's
surface," Cackett said. "And since the inner part of the disk obviously
can't orbit any closer than the neutron star's surface, these measurements
give us a maximum size of the neutron star's diameter. The neutron stars
can be no larger than 18 to 20.5 miles across, results that agree with
other types of measurements."
Knowing a neutron star's size and mass allows physicists to describe
the "stiffness," or "equation of state," of matter packed inside these
incredibly dense objects. Besides using these iron lines to test
Einstein's general theory of relativity, astronomers can probe conditions
in the inner part of a neutron star's accretion disk.
"Now that we've seen this relativistic iron line around three neutron
stars, we have established a new technique," Miller said. "It's very
difficult to measure the mass and diameter of a neutron star, so we need
several techniques to work together to achieve that goal."
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