Press release

 

THE FIRST DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF THE MAGNETIC FIELD
OF AN ISOLATED NEUTRON STAR

Paris, June 12, 2003

 

CNES/CNRS Joint Press Release

Direct measurement of the magnetic field at the surface of a neutron star was made possible for the first time with EPIC, the European Photon Imaging Camera, aboard the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton spacecraft. This value is equal to approximately eighty billion times the average magnetic field of our sun. These results were obtained by a Franco-Italian team of the Centre d’Etude Spatiale des Rayonnements (CESR: a joint research unit of the CNRS, Université Paul Sabatier of Toulouse, Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées, France), of the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche of Milan and the Università degli Studi of Pavia, Italy, and published in the journal, Nature(1) , on June 12, 2003.


A neutron star is one of the "monsters of the sky". It is the result of the explosion of a massive star, a supernova, in which part of the star is ejected into space with the rest undergoing gravitational collapse and forming a neutron star that rotates very rapidly. It is actually a celestial body that is so compressed that it contains a mass on the order of that of our sun within a radius of 10 km. Matter in the center of a neutron star is in a hyper-condensed state and cannot be reproduced on the earth. It is a true laboratory of the extreme limits of physics, thanks to which we have the opportunity to understand some of the final stages of the evolution of the stars that fill our universe.

As a result of the temperature of their surface, on the order of several million degrees, neutron stars are directly observable in X-ray emission which explains the interest in observing them with the XMM-Newton spaceship that detects this high-energy radiation. It is one of the cornerstones of the ESA scientific program, launched into orbit by Ariane 5 in December 1999. The main instrument on board, the EPIC (European Photon Imaging Camera), was also designed within the framework of a joint European project with the considerable participation of the CNES, the Centre d’Etude Spatiale des Rayonnements (CNRS) and the French Atomic Energy Commission, with Giovanni F. Bignami, head of the CESR at this time, acting as the project's research director. In August 2002, the telescope was aimed at an isolated neutron star, 1E1207.4-5209, for two complete orbits, the longest observation ever made by XMM of an object in our galaxy. This object, relatively unknown until now, was chosen by the Franco-Italian team because previous observations had shown three wide absorption lines that could not be explained.

The results of the analysis of these lines, a joint effort between Toulouse and Milan, revealed some surprises. The X-rays emitted by the star clearly showed signs of an extremely big magnetic field that had never been directly observed on an isolated neutron star although it had been predicted from a theoretical point of view. Calculations indicated a value of the force of this magnetic field of approximately 8x1010 gauss. (the overall magnetic field of the sun is approximately 1 gauss). Presented at a workshop that was held at Columbia University in New York several weeks ago, these results were received with enthusiasm by the American scientific community that had itself tried to obtain these same measurements, but to no avail.

With this first measurement of the magnetic field of an isolated neutron star, astronomers have come closer to understanding the extreme limits of physics. With the help of these types of measurements, they will be able to improve their knowledge of neutron stars and their surfaces, in particular.

1 - Bignami G.F., Caraveo P.A., De Luca A., Mereghetti S. The magnetic field of an isolated neutron star from X-ray cyclotron absorption lines. Nature (2003).



Researcher contacts:
Giovanni Bignami
CESR. Tel: +33 5 01 55 85 86
E-mail: Giovanni.Bignami@cesr.fr

INSU CNRS contact:
Philippe Chauvin
Tel: +33 1 44 96 43 36
E-mail: philippe.chauvin@cnrs-dir.fr

Press Contact CNRS:
Martine Hasler
Tel: +33 1 44 96 46 35
E-mail: martine.hasler@cnrs-dir.fr

CNES press contact:
Eliane Moreaux
Tel: +33 5 61 27 33 44
E-mail:
eliane.moreaux@cnes.fr