Yes. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
A neutron star that rotates rapidly and gives off pulse is call a pulsar.
Basically another name for a neutron star.
Yes, see related question
A neutron star, also known as a pulsar.
No. A pulsar is a neutron star.
the name pulsar is given to a neutron star that rotates
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
Because a pulsar is a neutron star but with it's emmision lines visible from Earth. See related questions.
Yes.
Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.
No. A pulsar is a neutron star.
After a death of a Giant Star, a corpse of a star will be the remaining of it, right in the center of the aftermath, you will find one of the strangest objects in the Universe, the Pulsar and the Neutron Star.
A neutron star that rotates rapidly and gives off pulse is call a pulsar.
The crab pulsar is a neutron star, it does not have an atmosphere as far as we know.
It's called a pulsar. However - ALL young neutron stars emit the said beam. It's only if that beam is detectable on Earth is it called a pulsar. So a Neutron Star and a Pulsar are the same thing. See related questions. but then again they are different.
Anywhere that a normal star has collapsed into a neutron star. See, a pulsar is essentially a neutron star that magnetically rotates and emits long arm-like streams of radiation. So it is possible for a pulsar to found almost anywhere in space.