25 Nov 2025 06:00

Magnetars

Getting too close to a black hole is bad news. The black hole’s gravity can pull apart anything that’s falling into it atom by atom. A magnetar can do the same thing. And it’s not just its gravity you have to worry about. Its magnetic field can do the job as well – from hundreds of miles away.

A magnetar is a neutron star -the crushed corpse of a once mighty star. It’s heavier than the Sun, but only a little bigger than Washington, D.C. It’s born when a massive star can no longer produce nuclear reactions in its core. The core collapses, while the star’s outer layers explode.

The original star generated a strong magnetic field. As the core collapsed, the field was mashed inward as well, making it extremely powerful. It’s boosted by the turbulent sloshing inside the newly formed neutron star. So a typical magnetar’s magnetic field is a million billion times the strength of Earth’s field.

The neutron star sticks around, but its magnetic field weakens in a hurry. So there aren’t many magnetars around – only about 30 have been discovered.

The magnetic field can help produce titanic explosions. Interactions with the field can cause the crust of a neutron star to crack in a “starquake.” Energy from the quake is beamed out by the magnetic field, producing an outburst of gamma rays. The most powerful quake yet seen generated more energy in a tenth of a second than the Sun will emit in 150,000 years – the enormous power of a magnetar.

More about neutron stars tomorrow.

Script by Damond Benningfield


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