A neutron star has been spotted spinning at a cosmic snail's pace.
Neutron stars are normally extremely fast-spinning stellar corpses left over from the intense violence of a supernova, but researchers have found one in a"stellar graveyard" where one should not be – and it spins at a relatively glacial rate of once every 76 seconds.PSR J0901-4046,
emitted by the neutron star thanks to the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa and weren't even expecting to see it. The region of the sky they were observing was thought to be free of pulsars, since none had been observed there before. Now they might know why. Capturing eight-second-long samples of the sky, they caught sight of a single pulse from the star, which had to be confirmed with subsequent observation due to its unexpectedly long rotational period.
"Amazingly we only detect radio emission from this source for 0.5 percent of its rotation period," said research lead Dr. Manisha Caleb, formerly of the University of Manchester but now with the University of Sydney, in a"This means that it is very lucky that the radio beam intersected with the Earth," Caleb added.