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Pulsar sends stellar disk fragment speeding into space

"As the pulsar moved through the disk, it appears that it punched a clump of material out and flung it away into space," researcher George Pavlov said.

By Brooks Hays
An illustration shows what the collision may have looked like. Photo by NASA
An illustration shows what the collision may have looked like. Photo by NASA

STATE COLLEGE, Pa., July 24 (UPI) -- NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory is keeping an eye on a runaway stellar disk that's picking up speed as it races off into outer space.

The space-based telescope first observed the escaped chunk of gas, several years ago, after witnessing a pulsar collide with its companion star's stellar disk, punching a hole in the ring of gas and dust. Now, astronomers say the disk fragment is picking up steam.

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The binary star system is called PSR B1259-63/LS 2883, or B1259 for short. The pair consists of a pulsar, the dense stellar remnants of supernova explosion, and a larger star whose rotation rate is near break-up speed, spinning off material.

The pulsar's highly elliptical orbit sends it through the larger star's stellar disk every 41 months. On its most recent pass through, the pulsar -- whose ferocious spin rate sends out pulses of high-energy particles at near the speed of light -- punched a hole in the disk.

"These two objects are in an unusual cosmic arrangement and have given us a chance to witness something special," George Pavlov, an astronomer at Penn State University, said in a recent press release. "As the pulsar moved through the disk, it appears that it punched a clump of material out and flung it away into space."

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Pavlov is the lead author of a new paper on the collision, published this week in the Astrophysical Journal.

Initial observations showed the disk fragment moving through space at 7 percent the speed of light. More recent observation show the gas and accelerated to 15 percent the speed of light -- likely propelled by the winds of the pulsar.

"This just shows how powerful the wind blasting off a pulsar can be," said co-author Jeremy Hare, an astronomer at George Washington University. "The pulsar's wind is so strong that it could ultimately eviscerate the entire disk around its companion star over time."

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