Stellar speed limit.Ripples in the fabric of space-time space-time, central concept in the theory of relativity that replaces the earlier concepts of space and time as separate absolute entities. In relativity one cannot uniquely distinguish space and time as elements in descriptions of events. Space and time are joined together in an intimate combination in which time becomes the "fourth dimension." The mathematical formulation of the theory by H. may put the brakes on the fastest-spinning stars in the universe and prevent them from flying apart. These stars, known as pulsars, pack as much mass as the sun into a sphere only about 16 kilometers across. These dense, spinning remains of stellar explosions slow down over millions of years. However, they can rev back up by pulling mass off a neighboring star. In theory, pulsars could remain intact at speeds as high as 1,000 to 3,000 revolutions per second. But in a recent survey of 11 pulsars, NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer satellite found that none reached such speeds. In fact, the study indicates that no pulsar spins more than 760 times a second. In the July 3 Nature, Deepto Chakrabarty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his colleagues speculate that gravitational radiation may be the cosmic speed enforcer. This proposed radiation, a wavelike disturbance in space-time predicted by Albert Einstein, would be emitted by any massive object that is accelerating. According to Lars Bildsten of the University of California, Santa Barbara, the faster a pulsar spins, the more radiation it releases. Ultimately, the energy lost in gravitational radiation balances the amount the pulsar gains by siphoning material from a companion star. When that happens, the pulsar displays its highest rate of rotation, Chakrabarty and his colleagues suggest. Gravitational-wave detectors now in operation in Hanford, Wash., and Livingston, La., will eventually search for this radiation, says Bildsten.--R.C. |
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