Toggle light / dark theme

At 716 times per second, this neutron star is the universe’s fastest spinning celestial object

Posted in cosmology

What makes PSR J1748–2446 famous for its weirdness? Easy. It is the celestial object that spins the fastest in the universe. It’s also a star whose surface is not just solid, but harder than a diamond. Compared to lead, its density is 50 trillion times higher. Compared to our Sun, its magnetic field sizzles a trillion times more intensely. It is, in essence, the most extreme form of neutron star.

When a heavy sun explodes in a supernova, the core of the sun, which has the mass of several million Earths, collapses into a tiny sphere and the rest of the sun shoots outward. This is how neutron stars are created. When this occurs, the inverse-square law of gravity goes into its demo-mode with a vengeance.