Method pioneered for probing exotic matter
Astronomers using XMM-Newton and Suzaku have seen Einstein's predicted distortion of space-time and pioneered a ground-breaking technique for determining the properties of neutron stars.
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Neutron stars cram more than a Sun's worth of material into a city-sized sphere. This means that a cup of neutron-star stuff would outweigh Mount Everest. Astronomers use these collapsed stars as natural laboratories to study how tightly matter can be compacted under the most extreme pressure that nature can offer.
"This is fundamental physics," says Sudip Bhattacharyya at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, USA. "There could be exotic kinds of particles or states of matter, such as quark matter, in the centres of neutron stars, but its impossible to create them in the lab. The only way to find out is to understand neutron stars."
To address this mystery, scientists must accurately and precisely measure the diameters and masses of neutron stars. In two concurrent studies, one with XMM-Newton and the other with Suzaku, astronomers have taken a big step forward.
Using XMM-Newton, Bhattacharyya and his colleague Tod Strohmayer observed a binary system known as Serpens X-1, which contains a neutron star and a stellar companion. They studied a spectral line from hot iron atoms that are whirling around in a disc, just beyond the neutron stars surface, at 40% the speed of light.
Previous X-ray observatories detected iron lines around neutron stars, but they lacked the sensitivity to measure the shapes of the lines in detail.
Thanks to XMM-Newtons large mirrors, Bhattacharyya and Strohmayer found that the iron line is broadened asymmetrically by the gass extreme velocity, which smears and distorts the line because of the Doppler effect and beaming effects predicted by Einsteins special theory of relativity. The warping of space-time by the neutron stars powerful gravity, an effect of Einsteins general theory of relativity, shifts the neutron stars iron line to longer wavelengths.
"We have seen these asymmetric lines from many black holes, but this is the first confirmation that neutron stars can produce them as well. It shows that the way neutron stars accrete matter is not very different from that of black holes, and gives us a new tool to probe Einsteins theory," says Strohmayer.
A group led by Edward Cackett and Jon Miller of the University of Michigan, which includes Bhattacharyya and Strohmayer, used Suzaku's superb spectral capabilities to survey three neutron-star binaries: Serpens X-1, GX 349+2, and 4U 1820-30. This team observed a nearly identical iron line in Serpens X-1, confirming the XMM-Newton result. It detected similarly skewed iron lines in the other two systems as well.
"Were seeing the gas whipping around just outside the neutron star's surface," says Cackett. "And since the inner part of the disc obviously cannot orbit any closer than the neutron stars surface, these measurements give us a maximum size of the neutron star's diameter. The neutron stars can be no larger than 29 to 33 km across, results that agree with other types of measurements."
"Now that we have seen this relativistic iron line around three neutron stars, we have established a new technique," adds Miller. "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."
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 use them to probe conditions in the inner part of a neutron star's accretion disc.
Source: ESA
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