🔬 Science 2d ago · Keith Cooper

Astronomers discover radio signals coming from rare 'Blue Eye Pulsar' after decades of silence

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Astronomers discover radio signals coming from rare 'Blue Eye Pulsar' after decades of silence
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Silent neutron stars at the center of supernova blast sites may actually be whispering softly, following the detection of faint radio emissions coming from one such object for the first time. The discovery raises the prospect that there could be many more pulsars in our galaxy than we thought.When a massive star explodes as a supernova, the devastation leads to the star's core collapsing under its own gravity to form either a neutron star or a black hole. When a neutron star is formed, it is bor

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