If a magnetar flew past
Earth within 100,000 miles, the intense magnetic field of the exotic object
would destroy the data on every credit card on the planet.
This is not likely to
happen, though, seeing as there are not many magnetars around. Recent research
postulates that magnetars come from the death of very massive stars, which may
mean that the dozen or so magnetars so far seen may be all our galaxy holds.
"The source of these very
powerful magnetic objects has been a mystery since the first one was discovered
in 1998," said Bryan Gaensler from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics. "Now, we think we have solved that mystery."
Gaensler and his team
investigated the gas around the magnetar called 1E 1048.1-5937, located 9,000
light-years away in the constellation Carina. They found evidence that the
original star, out of which the magnetar formed, had a mass 30 to 40 times that
of the Sun.
"A star of that size is
very rare," Gaensler said.
Such a hefty beginning
would help explain the difference between magnetars and their close cousins,
pulsars.
Card
eraser
Pulsars are stellar corpses
that serve as the radio lighthouses of the galaxy. Spinning around several times
a second, they flash the galaxy with a beam of radio
waves.
Magnetars are similar, but
they flash X-rays, and at a slower rate - about once every 10 seconds. They also
occasionally let out a burst of gamma rays.
There are about 1,500 known
pulsars, but less than a dozen firmly identified magnetars. What makes magnetars
special is their magnetic field, which is thousands of times stronger than that
of normal pulsars and billions of times stronger than that of any magnet on
Earth.
"Magnetars have the highest
magnetic fields in the universe - nothing else comes close," Gaensler
said.
These credit-card-erasing
fields can be measured by observing how quickly the spin of the magnetar slows
down. A rotating magnet gives off energy, and the greater the magnetic field,
the faster the energy loss. Magnetars exhibit rapid deceleration, which implies
a huge magnetic field.
Gaensler has estimated that
after 10,000 years a magnetar will slow down enough to turn off its X-ray
flash.
Mighty
wind
Magnetars and pulsars
belong to a class of objects called neutron stars, which are big balls of
tightly packed neutrons no larger than a big city.
Here's how they form: When
stars above about eight solar masses run out of fuel to burn, they explode in
what is called a supernova. What remains can collapses into a neutron star.
To have such large magnetic
fields, magnetars are thought to originate from the supernova of very massive
stars. Gaensler and his colleagues have found evidence for this in an enormous
void - more than 70 light-years across - that showed up in their radio
data.
"The empty bubble is
exactly centered on the magnetar and it is expanding," Gaensler said.
He explained that the
magnetar's radiation cannot be the cause of the cavity, since that would require
the absorption of too many of the X-rays that are seen. Instead, a stellar wind
from the progenitor star of the magnetar must have cleared out the gas.
This wind would have been
five times faster than the Sun's wind of charged particles -- the source of
space weather and the Northern Lights -- and a million times denser. The implied
energy is 25 million times that of our solar wind.
It takes a very massive
star, some 30 to 40 solar masses, to generate such a powerful gust. If this is
the correct explanation, then the progenitor star lived 5-6 million years before
it exploded - creating the magnetar in its ashes. (Massive stars die young. Our
middle-ages Sun, by comparison, is about 4.6 billion years
old.)
Crash
diet
In sweeping out the huge
bubble around it, the heavy star blew off 2 to 3 solar masses of material. But
even losing 10 percent of its mass in this way, the supernova remnant would have
been too heavy to form a neutron star and would instead have collapsed into a
black hole, theory holds.
"Astronomers used to think
that really massive stars formed black holes when they died," said Simon
Johnston from the Australia Telescope National Facility. "But in the past few
years we've realized that some of these stars could form pulsars, because they
go on a rapid weight-loss program before they explode as
supernovae."
Gaensler said that, at the
very end of its life, the star likely lost 90 percent of its mass, which would
make it skinny enough to become a neutron star, as opposed to a black
hole.
Wild
adolescence
It is possible from the
wind bubble data to estimate that the supernova detonated about 3,000 years ago.
Other magnetars are also thought to be a few thousand years
old.
"We do know these magnetars
are an adolescent stage of neutron stars," said Jeremy Heyl from the University
of British Columbia. Heyl was not involved in the work.
If magnetars arise out of
more massive stars, then only 10 percent of neutron stars will go through the
magnetar stage - ruling out some theories that all pulsars spend some time as
magnetars.
The researchers estimate
that in our galaxy there are only about 10 neutron stars from a massive enough
progenitor and at the right age to be magnetars right now. There could be many
more "dead" magnetars in the galaxy, however.
Whether these results,
which appear in an upcoming issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters, are
the end of the story is too soon to say.
"Right now, it is only one
object that they have measured," Heyl said. "You can't make a very strong
conclusion, but the hint is
tantalizing."