Ultrabright stellar object is shining beyond the 'death line,' and no one can explain it
By Brandon Specktor published 5 days ago
A slowly rotating, ultrabright object 15,000 light-years from Earth defies every logical explanation that astronomers have thrown at it.
An illustration of a magnetar blasting blue jets of radio energy into space, baffling humans 15,000 light-years away. (Image credit: ICRAR)
Astronomers have discovered a new class of stellar object that seems to be defying death in inexplicable ways.
The object, located about 15,000 light-years from Earth, appears to be a magnetar the collapsed heart of a once-giant star, now cramming a sun's worth of mass into a ball no wider than a city, while crackling with a magnetic field more than a quadrillion times stronger than Earth's.
These tiny, twirling balls can emit ultrabright jets of electromagnetic radiation as they spin, including radio waves that pulse to steady, mysterious rhythms that typically repeat every few seconds or minutes. These radio pulses usually stop entirely after a few months or years, as the magnetar's rotation slows to a point dubbed the "death line" a theoretical threshold beyond which the star's magnetic field becomes too weak to generate any more high-energy radiation.
This newly discovered magnetar, however, still seems to be blazing with steady, bright radiation from beyond the death line and it has been doing so for more than 30 years.
More:
https://www.livescience.com/space/astronomy/ultrabright-stellar-object-is-shining-beyond-the-death-line-and-no-one-can-explain-it