Astronomers saw two neutron stars snapping together and giving birth to a magnetar



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Two neutron stars snapped together away from Earth. The energy of their collision illuminated their corner of the sky with a brief flash of gamma radiation, followed by a softer, longer lasting glow on electromagnetic spectrum. Looking into this fading light, the researchers spotted a infrared signal – the very first recorded signature, they think, of a newborn cosmic juggernaut, a magnetar.

A magnetar is a neutron star with an unusually strong magnetic field. Astronomers have spotted magnetars elsewhere in the universe, but they have never seen one emerge. This time, researchers suspected they spotted a newborn magnetar because of an unusual pattern of blinking light. First, there was a short ultra-bright burst of gamma radiation (GRB). Then there was a bright, long-lasting ‘kilonova’, a telltale sign of the collision of neutron stars. And that glow was much brighter than usual, suggesting a phenomenon astronomers had never seen before.

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