A pulsar is the rapidly spinning and highly magnetized core left behind when a massive star explodes. Because only rotation powers their intense gamma-ray, radio and particle emissions, pulsars gradually slow as they age. But the oldest pulsars spin hundreds of times per second — faster than a kitchen blender. These millisecond pulsars have been spun up and rejuvenated by accreting matter from a companion star.
Millisecond pulsars are nature’s most precise clocks, with long-term, sub-microsecond stability that rivals human-made atomic clocks. Precise monitoring of timing changes in an all-sky array of millisecond pulsars may allow the first direct detection of gravitational waves — a long-sought consequence of Einstein’s relativity theory.The Global Positioning System uses time-delay measurements among satellite clocks to determine where you are on Earth,” explained Scott Ransom of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Va. “Similarly, by monitoring timing changes in a constellation of suitable millisecond pulsars spread all over the sky, we may be able to detect the cumulative background of passing gravitational waves.
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