We Saw One of the Most Powerful Magnets in the Universe Come to Life

A magnetar.
Artist’s impression of a magnetar. (Image: Carl Knox, OzGrav/Swinburne University of Technology)

After a decade of silence, one of the most powerful magnets in the universe suddenly burst back to life in late 2018. The reawakening of this “magnetar,” a city-sized star named XTE J1810-197, born from a supernova explosion, was an incredibly violent affair.

The snapping and untwisting of the tangled magnetic field released enormous amounts of energy as gamma rays, X-rays, and radio waves.

By catching magnetar outbursts like this in action, astronomers are beginning to understand what drives their erratic behavior. We are also finding potential links to enigmatic flashes of radio light seen from distant galaxies known as fast radio bursts.

In two new pieces of research published in Nature Astronomy, we used three of the world’s largest radio telescopes to capture a host of never before seen changes in the radio waves emitted by one of these rare objects in unprecedented detail.

Magnetic monsters

Magnetars are young neutron stars with fields billions of times stronger than our most powerful Earth-based magnets. The slow decay of their fields creates an enormous amount of stress in their hard outer crust until it eventually fractures. This twists the field and releases large amounts of energetic X-rays and gamma rays as it unwinds.

Illustration of 3 types of neutron stars: the magnetar, pulsar, and magnetar-pulsar.
Magnetars are young neutron stars, with magnetic fields billions of times stronger than our most powerful Earth-based magnets. (Image: via NASA / JPL-Caltech)

These exotic stars were initially detected back in 1979 when an intense gamma-ray burst emitted by one was picked up by spacecraft across the Solar System. Since then, we’ve found another 30 magnetars, the vast majority of which have only been detected as sources of X-rays and gamma rays. However, a rare few have since been found to also emit flashes of radio waves.

The first of these “radio-loud” magnetars goes by the name XTE J1810-197. Astronomers initially discovered it as a bright source of X-rays after an outburst in 2003, then found it emitted bright pulses of radio waves as it rotated every 5.54 seconds.

Unfortunately, the intensity of the radio pulses dropped rapidly, and within two years it had completely faded from view. XTE J1810-197 remained in this radio silent state for over a decade.

A wobbly start

On December 11, 2018, astronomers using the University of Manchester’s 76-meter Lovell telescope at the Jodrell Bank Observatory noticed that XTE J1810-197 was once again emitting bright radio pulses. This was quickly confirmed by both the Max-Planck-Institut’s 100-meter Effelsberg radio telescope in Germany and Murriyang, CSIRO’s 64-meter Parkes radio telescope in Australia.

Following confirmation, all three telescopes began an intense campaign to track how the magnetar’s radio emission then evolved over time.

The reactivated radio pulses from XTE J1810-197 were found to be highly linearly polarized, appearing to wiggle either up and down, left to right, or some combination of the two. Careful measurements of the polarization direction allowed us to determine how the magnetar’s magnetic field and spin direction are oriented with respect to the Earth.

Our diligent tracking of the polarization direction revealed something remarkable: The direction of the star’s spin was slowly wobbling. By comparing the measured wobble against simulations, we were able to determine the magnetar’s surface had become slightly lumpy due to the outburst.

The amount of lumpiness was tiny, only about a millimeter off from being a perfect sphere, and gradually disappeared within three months of XTE J1810-917 waking up.

The two studies used data from the Effelsberg radio telescope in Germany (left), the Lovell telescope in the UK (middle), and Murriyang, CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope in Australia (right).
The two studies used data from the Effelsberg radio telescope in Germany (left), the Lovell telescope in the UK (middle), and Murriyang, CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope in Australia (right). (Image: Norbert Junkes / Mike Peel / Marcus Lower)

Twisted light

Normally, magnetars only emit very small amounts of circularly polarized radio waves, which travel in a spiral pattern. Unusually, we detected an enormous amount of circular polarization in XTE J1810-197 during the 2018 outburst.

Our observations with Murriyang revealed the normally linearly polarized radio waves were being converted into circularly polarized waves.

This “linear-to-circular conversion” had long been predicted to occur when radio waves travel through the super-heated soup of particles that resides in neutron star magnetic fields.

However, the theoretical predictions for how the effect should change with observing frequency did not match our observations, though we weren’t too surprised. The environment around a magnetar in outburst is a complicated place, and there are many effects that can be at play that relatively simple theories aren’t designed to account for.

Piecing it all together

The discovery of the slight wobble and the circular polarization in the radio emission of XTE J1810-197 represents an exciting leap forward in how we can study the outbursts of radio-loud magnetars. It also paints a more complete picture of the 2018 outburst.

We now know that cracking of the magnetar surface causes it to become distorted and wobble for a brief period of time, while the magnetic field becomes filled with super-hot particles whizzing about at almost light speed.

Combined with other observations, the amount of wobble could be used to test our theories of how matter should behave at densities much higher than we could ever hope to replicate in labs on Earth. The inconsistency of the linear-to-circular conversion with theory, on the other hand, motivates us to devise more complex ideas of how radio waves escape from their magnetic fields.

What’s next?

While XTE J1810-197 remains active to this day, it has since settled into a more relaxed state with no further signs of wobbling or linear-to-circular conversion. There are, however, hints that both phenomena may have been seen in past observations of other radio-loud magnetars, and might be a common feature of their outbursts.

Like cats, it’s impossible to predict what a magnetar will do next. But with current and future upgrades to telescopes in Australia, Germany, and North America, we are now more ready than ever to pounce the next time one decides to awaken.

Marcus Lower, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, CSIRO; Gregory Desvignes, Postdoctoral Researcher, Fundamental Physics in Radio Astronomy, Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy, and Patrick Weltevrede, Lecturer In Pulsar Astrophysics, University of Manchester

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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  • Troy Oakes

    Troy was born and raised in Australia and has always wanted to know why and how things work, which led him to his love for science. He is a professional photographer and enjoys taking pictures of Australia's beautiful landscapes. He is also a professional storm chaser where he currently lives in Hervey Bay, Australia.

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