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Bruce Allen,
Einstein@Home Project: Citizen Scientists Discover PSR J2007+2722
Rotating Pulsar
August 16, 2010
Idle computers are the astronomers' playground: Three citizen
scientists--an American couple and a German--have discovered a new radio
pulsar hidden in data gathered by the Arecibo Observatory. This is the
first deep-space discovery by Einstein@Home, which uses donated time
from the home and office computers of 250,000 volunteers from 192
different countries. This is the first genuine astronomical discovery by
a public volunteer distributed computing project. The details of their
discovery and the process of getting there are revealed in a paper
published in the Aug. 12 edition of Science Express.
Arecibo Observatory, an
NSF facility operated by Cornell University, is in Arecibo, Puerto Rico.
The new pulsar--called PSR J2007+2722--is a neutron star that rotates 41
times per second. It is in the Milky Way, approximately 17,000 light
years from Earth in the constellation Vulpecula. Unlike most pulsars
that spin as quickly and steadily, PSR J2007+2722 sits alone in space,
and has no orbiting companion star. Astronomers consider it especially
interesting since it is likely a recycled pulsar that lost its
companion. However they cannot rule out that it may be a young pulsar
born with an lower-than-usual magnetic field.
Chris and Helen Colvin, of Ames, Iowa, and Daniel Gebhardt, of
Universität Mainz, Musikinformatik, Germany, are credited with this
discovery. Their computers, along with half a million others from around
the world, are harnessed to analyze data for Einstein@Home (volunteers
contribute about two computers each).
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