T
theridane
Guest
Imagine a massive spinning star nearing the end of its life. As it goes supernova, a pulsar is formed. Conservation of momentum makes this pulsar spin up to tremendous angular rates (e.g. the PSR J1748-2446ad spinning at 716 Hz).
Speed of light plays an intersting role in this. The equator of a pulsar reaches relativistic velocities, which means that there is a limit to pulsar's size and/or rotational rate (its radius must be less than c/(2*pi*frequency), otherwise it would be travelling FTL, which is a bad thing for an equator to do).
My question is the following: if the mother star was large/spinning fast enough so that the resulting pulsar would violate the above equation, how would "the universe" respond? Would the pulsar slow down (as it forms) or would it undergo some sort of a "relativistic compression" event that would reduce its radius to satisfy the equation?
I'm guessing both, since the relativistic mass gain would be so huge that it would shrink the star and increase its momentum, allowing it to conserve it even at a lower rotational frequency.
Speed of light plays an intersting role in this. The equator of a pulsar reaches relativistic velocities, which means that there is a limit to pulsar's size and/or rotational rate (its radius must be less than c/(2*pi*frequency), otherwise it would be travelling FTL, which is a bad thing for an equator to do).
My question is the following: if the mother star was large/spinning fast enough so that the resulting pulsar would violate the above equation, how would "the universe" respond? Would the pulsar slow down (as it forms) or would it undergo some sort of a "relativistic compression" event that would reduce its radius to satisfy the equation?
I'm guessing both, since the relativistic mass gain would be so huge that it would shrink the star and increase its momentum, allowing it to conserve it even at a lower rotational frequency.