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.
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.
The fastest spinning neutron star that we've found so far is XTE J1739-285, which spins 1122 times every second. It was found by NASA's Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite. The most rapidly spinning pulsar, however, remains PSR J1748 2446ad, which spins 716 times a second. This pulsar was found by a team at Montreal's McGill University.
No, a pulsar has not been discovered near the sun. Pulsars are neutron stars that emit beams of radiation that can be detected by astronomers, but they are typically found in distant regions of our galaxy.
Yes, pulsars are often found in supernova remnants. Pulsars are rapidly rotating neutron stars that emit beams of radiation, and they are formed when a massive star undergoes a supernova explosion. The remnants of the supernova provide the environment from which the pulsar originates.
Neutron stars are a stellar rementant that is the result of either a gravitational collapse of a large star or a supernova event. Information on this subject can be found either on wikipedia or on more specialist sites such as; national geographic, imagine or the sience news website.
In the constellation Aries, various types of stars can be found, including main sequence stars, red giants, white dwarfs, and possibly even some neutron stars or black holes. The specific types of stars formed in this constellation will vary based on the age and stage of evolution of the stellar population present.
No. There is only one star in our Solar System, the Sun and it is not a pulsar.
Hydrogen and helium are thought to be formed during the Big Bang. We also know that helium is formed in stars during the process of stellar evolution. The other elements formed in stars during stellar evolution and end-of-life stellar events (like a supernova). It could be said that with the exception of hydrogen, all the elements formed in stars during one phase or another of the life of stars. This though minute quantities of some isotopes that are found in nature appear in the decay chains of other isotopes and were not themselves created in stars as described.
A neutron and protons are found in the middle or the nucleus, of an atom. A neutron has a neutral charge.
The neutron is found inside the nucleus of the atom.
Pulsar planet.
stellar nebulas are the birthplace of stars. 1st of the sequence in the lifecycle of stars.