M82X-2: Suspected Black Hole Unmasked as Ultraluminous Pulsar
The latest study of M82X-2 provides new challenges for theorists to develop models explaining how a pulsar can pull matter inward and produce such copious X-rays. When matter is pulled toward a dense, compact object, like a pulsar, neutron star, or black hole, it is heated and produces X-rays. These X-rays create a radiation pressure that pushes out on the matter. For sustained infall of matter, the radiation pressure of the X-rays should be less than the pull of the compact object's gravity. Read more
Astronomers have detected a pulsating dead star that appears to be burning with the energy of 10 million suns, making it the brightest pulsar ever detected. The pulsar - a rotating, magnetized neutron star - was found in the galaxy Messier 82 (M82), a relatively close galactic neighbour that's 12 million light-years from Earth. Read more