Finger on the pulse of the pulsars

Finger on the pulse of the pulsars
Its unique design allows Lofar to simultaneously detect radio emission from different directions. This image was obtained with Lofar by simultaneously observing five pulsars distributed across the whole sky. Credit: Tom Hassall / U.Man. / ASTRON

(PhysOrg.com) -- An international team of astronomers including German scientists has succeeded in recording the most sensitive observations to date of pulsars at low frequency. The measurement was undertaken with the European Lofar radio telescope network. Pulsars are fast-rotating neutron stars that are formed in the explosion of very massive stars (supernovae).

Lofar, the European low frequency radio telescope, is the first of a whole series of new types of to investigate the at the lowest frequencies which are actually accessible from the ground. One of the key projects is to find and study new pulsars in this "radio window". The German Glow (German Long ) consortium, whose membership includes the group of Michael Kramer, Director at the Max Planck Institute for in Bonn, is also involved.

“We are returning here to the radio frequencies where the pulsars were originally discovered in the 1960s,” says Ben Stappers from the University of Manchester, the lead author of the publication, which will be published soon in the scientific journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. “Except that with Lofar we now have a telescope with abilities that we could not have dreamed of back then.”

The chance finding of the first pulsar in 1967 is one of the great discoveries of astronomy. The astronomers found the first pulsar signals with a radio telescope at the low frequency of 81 megahertz, quite close to the radio frequencies in the VHF range.

Finger on the pulse of the pulsars
The Lofar station Effelsberg. In the foreground, the dipole field for low frequencies (30 to 80 megahertz, corresponding to between 3.8 and 10-metre wavelength); at the back, the “tile field” for higher frequencies (110 to 240 megahertz or 1.3 to 2.7-metre wavelength. Credit: Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy / Wolfgang Reich

With Lofar, the astronomers have now returned to the frequency range of the first measurements – but they are now using the latest computer technology and linking up the individual telescopes via high-speed fibre optic cables, which increase the power of the telescopes many times over. Lofar will make it possible to investigate the radio pulses in detail and also to study effects of gravitational physics and properties of the interstellar medium in our Milky Way. “Even if these are only early test results, they nevertheless already demonstrate the spectacular possibilities offered by Lofar,” says Stappers.

Lofar operates with the aid of thousands of small antennas that are distributed across various European countries and networked via high-speed Internet connections. The evaluation is done using a powerful supercomputer near the central Lofar station at ASTRON in the Netherlands.

The telescopes have no movable parts; instead, they are directed at the sky using digital time delay components. This provides much greater flexibility for the data analysis. Totally different directions in the sky can be covered simultaneously, for example, the only limiting factor being the computing capacity of the computer. This allows the sky to be surveyed much faster in the search for new pulsars.

“The imaging methods with Lofar differ greatly from those of conventional radio telescopes,” says Ralf-Jürgen Dettmar from the Ruhr University of Bochum and Chairman of the German Glow consortium. “With conventional systems, only quite small areas of the sky can be covered in a short time. Lofar, on the other hand, makes it possible to take snapshots of vast regions of the sky in the same time, and thus enables us to monitor these regions to discover new pulsars and possibly other rare phenomena.”

For the next stages in the investigation of pulsars the research team wants to use the special abilities of this radio telescope to get on the trail of the radiation mechanism of the neutron stars. “Lofar is a fantastic telescope to complement our current observation instruments to study pulsars at long wavelengths,” says Max Planck Director Michael Kramer. The system has the potential to find a large number of previously undiscovered pulsars in the vicinity of our sun. “We want to use them to detect gravitational waves.”

Lofar enables scientists to investigate radio waves across a very extensive frequency range – across more than one order of magnitude from 10 to 240 megahertz. Apart from searching for pulsars, the system is used for sky surveys in the long-wave radio range, and also for cosmological studies, as well as to monitor solar activity and study planets. additionally acts as the forerunner project for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), the planned global radio telescope of the next generation.

More information: B. W. Stappers et al. Observing pulsars and fast transients with LOFAR. Astronomy & Astrophysics, DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201116681 astro-ph

Citation: Finger on the pulse of the pulsars (2011, May 6) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2011-05-finger-pulse-pulsars.html
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