This artist’s concept shows an isolated neutron star
as an ultra-dense stellar remnant, packing more mass than the Sun into a
city-sized sphere and radiating energy as it slowly cools in the depths of
space. NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will search for, and
could measure the mass of, isolated neutron stars using astrometric
microlensing.
NASA, STScI, Ralf Crawford (STScI)
Astronomers have long known that neutron stars, the crushed cores left
behind after massive stars explode, should be scattered throughout the Milky
Way galaxy. However, most of them are effectively invisible. A new study
published in Astronomy and Astrophysics suggests NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace
Roman Space Telescope could spot them anyway.
Using detailed simulations of the
Milky Way and Roman’s future observations, researchers showed the flagship
observatory may be able to identify and characterize dozens of isolated neutron
stars through a subtle effect called gravitational microlensing.
“Most neutron stars are relatively
dim and on their own,” said Zofia Kaczmarek of Heidelberg University in
Germany, who led the study. “They are incredibly hard to spot without some sort of help.”
Finding what’s invisible
Neutron stars pack more mass than the Sun into a sphere about the size of a city.
Studying them helps us understand how stars live, die, and spread heavy
elements throughout the universe. They also provide a chance to study what
happens under the most extreme conditions (pressures and densities) imaginable.
Yet, unless they are pulsars that beam in radio wavelengths or glow in
X-rays, they can remain hidden from even the most powerful telescopes.
Roman can search for them in a
different way. When a massive object like a neutron star moves in front of a
distant background star, its intense gravity warps spacetime and deflects the
background star’s light. This microlensing effect briefly makes the background
star brighter and appear offset from its true position in the sky.
While many telescopes can detect
the temporary brightening, Roman can measure both the brightening (photometry)
and the tiny positional shift (astrometry) of the lensed star with exceptional
precision.
Astrometric microlensing occurs when a foreground
object, like a neutron star, passes in front of a more distant background star.
The neutron star’s gravity bends the distant star’s light, splitting it into
multiple paths that reach the telescope. Although these distorted images can’t
be resolved, their combined light appears brighter and slightly shifted from
the distant star’s true position. As the alignment between the two objects
changes over time, this apparent shift traces a small elliptical pattern on the
sky. The size of that ellipse depends on how strongly the light is bent,
meaning more massive objects produce larger shifts, allowing astronomers to
directly measure the mass of the otherwise invisible neutron star.
NASA, STScI, Joyce Kang (STScI)
Because neutron stars are relatively massive, they produce a larger
astrometric signal than lighter objects, allowing missions like Roman to not
only detect them, but also weigh them in some cases, something that is nearly
impossible with photometry alone.
“What’s really cool about using
microlensing is that you can get direct mass measurements,” said paper
co-author Peter McGill of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. “Photometry
tells us that something passed in front of the star, but it’s the amount the
star’s position shifts that tells us how massive that object is. By measuring
that tiny deflection on the sky, we can directly weigh something that is
otherwise unseen.”
Roman’s measurements could help
astronomers determine whether there is a true gap between the masses of neutron
stars and black holes and how fast neutron stars are moving.
Scientists are particularly
interested in understanding the powerful “kicks” neutron stars receive when
they are born in supernova explosions. These kicks can send them racing through
the galaxy at hundreds of miles per second.
Huge surveys, high chance of payoff
The research team will utilize
Roman’s future Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey, which will monitor millions of stars at a time in
vast images of the sky, taken at a high frequency.
“We’re going to get to work as soon
as the data start coming in,” said McGill. “Even in the first months after
commissioning, we expect to start identifying promising events.”
Even a relatively small number of
confirmed detections could significantly improve models of stellar explosions
and extreme matter.
“We don’t know the mass
distribution of neutron stars, black holes, or where one ends and the other
begins with any certainty,” McGill said. “Roman will really be a breakthrough
in that.”
Although only a few thousand
neutron stars have been detected so far, mostly as pulsars, scientists estimate
there could be tens of millions to hundreds of millions in the Milky Way.
Additionally, to date, researchers have only been able to measure the masses of
neutron stars in binary pairings.
“We’re seeing a small sample that’s
not representative of the big picture,” Kaczmarek said. “Even a single mass
measurement would be very powerful. If we found just one isolated neutron star,
it would already be incredibly stimulating to our research.”
Looking ahead
The study also highlights a
creative use of the mission’s capabilities. While Roman’s survey is designed
primarily to find exoplanets using photometric microlensing, its powerful
astrometric capabilities open the door to entirely new discoveries with astrometric
microlensing.
“This wasn’t part of the original
plan,” said McGill. “But it turns out Roman’s astrometric capability is really
good at detecting neutron stars and black holes, so we can add a whole new kind
of science to Roman’s surveys.”
If the predictions hold true, the
mission could provide the first large sample of isolated neutron stars
discovered through their gravity alone, revealing a hidden population that has
remained out of reach until now. Roman is expected to transform the study of
microlensing and the hidden populations of objects in our galaxy, from rogue
exoplanets to stellar remnants like neutron stars.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space
Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, with participation by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California; Caltech/IPAC in Pasadena, California; the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore; and a science team comprising scientists from various
research institutions. The primary industrial partners are BAE Systems Inc. in
Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in Rochester, New York; and Teledyne
Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks, California.
To learn more about Roman visit: https://nasa.gov/roman
By Hannah Braun
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
Source: NASA’s Roman Poised to Transform Hunt for Elusive Neutron Stars - NASA


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