pulsars 1
pulsars 2
pulsars 3
pulsars 4
pulsars 5
100

pulsars are rotating______?

neutron stars

100

A star with the mass of the sun will never become a neutron star, instead, our star will end its life having run out of hydrogen to fuse into ____

helium as a smoldering stellar remnant called a white dwarf.

100

If the star was massive enough to overwhelm this effect the neutron star would continue to collapse until it transforms into a ______

black hole

100

 According to NASA, the material that comprises neutron stars is so dense that a mere teaspoon of it would weigh 4 billion tons. This is equivalent to________ empire state buildings stacked on a tiny spoon

10,000

100

As the collapse proceeds the outer layers of the star are blown away in a supernova explosion with only the

iron core of the massive star containing masses equivalent to that of the sun up to about 1.5 times that of our star remaining.

200

Even though the light is constantly shining, you only see the beam when it is pointing directly in your______

direction.

200

their light output is mostly_____

consistent

200

pulsars give off_____

radiation

200

There are two types of pulsars, ones with periods of a few milliseconds with this periodicity changing very slowly over time, called millisecond pulsars, and other pulsars which are just called

'ordinary pulsars.'

200

Like all neutron stars, pulsars are born when stars with masses between four and eight times that of the sun run out of________

fuel for nuclear fusion

300

A MYSTERIOUS gamma-ray glow in the inner parts of our galaxy could be due to thousands of dead stars spinning at______

hundreds of times a second.

300

This also means that the name 'pulsar' may actually be misleading as these neutron stars don't actually pulse by periodically shrinking and swelling in size, as astronomers once thought. Their pulsing is merely a factor of their

orientation in relation to our view of them

300

Imagine this as a pair of open scissors spinning on one handle. One blade points upwards, this is the axis of rotation, while the other blade is the________

is the beam of light.

300

 we see pulsars turn on and_____

and off as the beam sweeps over Earth.

300

 Even though pulsars were first discovered as radio sources they have now been observed using optical,_______

X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes.


400

One way to think of a pulsar is like a lighthouse. At night, a lighthouse emits a beam of_____

light

400

 Jocelyn Bell noticed________

small pulses of radiation

400

ever team has a chance to guess this one closest gets the points 

Pulsar astronomers have now detected over_____ 

guess somewhere between 1400 & 2000

1500

400

The Parkes radio telescope in Australia has found more than_______ as many pulsars as other radio telescopes

twice

400

when were people discovering pulsars_____

1967

500

These millisecond pulsars are formed from the remnants of stars that have used up all their______

fuel

500

pulsars give radiation of in how much time _____ & _____ 

seconds or milliseconds

500

Pulsars have very strong magnetic fields which funnel jets of particles out along the two______

magnetic poles

500

The first pulsar was discovered by chance by______&________

Jocelyn Bell & Anthony Hewish

500

pulsars have strong magnetic______

fields

M
e
n
u