PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rare binary star system formed when a neutron star orbited inside another star

Summary author: Walter Beckwith

2025-05-22
(Press-News.org) Astronomers have identified a rare type of binary star system containing a rapidly spinning millisecond pulsar and a helium star companion, formed via common envelope evolution. Although such systems are rare, the authors of this new study predict that others do exist; they estimate there are 16 to 84 undiscovered examples in the Milky Way. Millisecond pulsars – rapidly spinning neutron stars that emit radio waves – achieve their extraordinary rotation rates by siphoning matter from a close stellar companion. The formation of these exotic binary systems is not fully understood, because it can involve a variety of complex processes. Theory predicts that binary systems can experience a "common envelope" phase, in which one stellar object orbits within the outer layers of its companion. If the companion object in this evolutionary scenario is a neutron star, theory predicts that the outer layers are rapidly ejected, leaving a binary system composed of a recycled pulsar and a stripped helium star. However, no such systems have previously been observed. ZongLin Yang and colleagues characterize the millisecond pulsar PSR J1928+1815 using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST). They find that the pulsar resides in a tight binary system with a companion helium star, on a short orbital period of 3.6 hours. Yang et al. use stellar models to show that this system formed after an unstable transfer of mass from the companion star to the neutron star triggered the formation of a common envelope around both stars. The neutron star spiraled closer to the other star’s core, releasing energy that ejected the outer envelope and left behind a tightly bound binary system.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ancient remains reveal how a pathogen began to use lice – not ticks – to infect humans

2025-05-22
Most relapsing fever bacteria that infect humans are spread by ticks, but Borrelia recurrentis is unique in being transmitted between humans via body lice. Now, new genomic evidence from ancient British remains suggests that B. recurrentis diverged from its tick-borne relatives and began adapting to transmission by lice between 6000 and 4000 years ago – coinciding with the widespread use of wool textiles by humans. The findings underscore how ancient DNA can illuminate the origins and evolution of infectious diseases and how pathogens like B. recurrentis have been shaped by human social transformations. Several pathogenic bacterial species that ...

Ancient DNA used to map evolution of fever-causing bacteria

2025-05-22
Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL have analysed ancient DNA from Borrelia recurrentis, a type of bacteria that causes relapsing fever, pinpointing when it evolved to spread through lice rather than ticks, and how it gained and lost genes in the process. This transition may have coincided with changes in human lifestyles, like living closer together and the beginning of the wool trade. Borrelia recurrentis bacteria cause relapsing fever, an illness with many recurring episodes of fever, which is typically found ...

New standards in nuclear physics

2025-05-22
New standards in nuclear physics An international research team led by the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI has measured the radius of the nucleus of muonic helium-3 with unprecedented precision. The results are an important stress test for theories and future experiments in atomic physics. 1.97007 femtometre (quadrillionths of a metre): That’s how unimaginably tiny the radius of the atomic nucleus of helium-3 is. This is the result of an experiment at PSI that has now been published in the journal Science. More than 40 researchers from international institutes collaborated to develop and implement a method that ...

Why Europe’s fisheries management needs a rethink

2025-05-22
As legally required by the European Union, sustainable fisheries may not extract more fish than can regrow each year. Yet, about 70 per cent of commercially targeted fish stocks in northern EU waters are either overfished, have shrunken population sizes or have collapsed entirely. So why does the EU continue to miss its sustainable fisheries targets, despite a wealth of scientific data and policy instruments? Researchers at GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and Kiel University examined this question using the well-explored ...

Seven more years of funding for Konstanz Cluster of Excellence "The Politics of Inequality"

2025-05-22
The Cluster of Excellence "The Politics of Inequality" at the University of Konstanz will continue to receive funding through the German Excellence Strategy for another seven years. The German Research Foundation (DFG) and the German Council of Science and Humanities (WR) made the announcement on 22 May 2025. The Cluster of Excellence applied for around 52 million euros in funding. Clusters of Excellence are large, transdisciplinary research networks that study relevant research topics at the highest level internationally; they are one of the funding lines of the Excellence Strategy. "Our Cluster of Excellence 'The Politics ...

Biological markers for teen depression

2025-05-22
Using a novel lab method they developed, McGill University researchers have identified nine molecules in the blood that were elevated in teens diagnosed with depression. These molecules also predicted how symptoms might progress over time. The findings of the clinical study could pave the way for earlier detection, before symptoms worsen and become hard to treat. “Alarmingly, more and more adolescents are being diagnosed with depression, and when it starts early, the effects can be long-lasting and severe,” said senior author Cecilia Flores, James ...

Researchers show social connection is still underappreciated as a medically relevant health factor

2025-05-22
Research confirms that social isolation and loneliness significantly impact health and mortality, even if not listed on death certificates. BYU psychology and neuroscience professor, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, has published extensively on the topic, including a landmark 2010 meta-analysis and a 2023 framework on assessment and treatment. She also served as lead scientist on the 2023 Surgeon General Advisory and is advising the World Health Organization on an upcoming report that addresses the pressing health threat of loneliness and isolation and a global agenda on social connection. Social connection is now a legitimate health factor, but Holt-Lunstad ...

Great success: The University of Cologne is granted five Clusters of Excellence

2025-05-22
The University of Cologne is once again highly successful in the Excellence Strategy: Five Clusters of Excellence will be funded in the next funding period. This was announced today by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the German Science and Humanities Council. The following Clusters will be funded for seven years: CECAD for aging research, CEPLAS for plant sciences, DYNAVERSE for astrophysics, ECONtribute for economics and ML4Q for quantum research. These Clusters reflect the academic fields of the natural sciences, life sciences, humanities and social sciences represented at the University of Cologne. “We ...

UNAM researchers supported to publish open access articles in over 2,400 Taylor & Francis journals

2025-05-22
The global impact of Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) research is set to increase under a new open access (OA) agreement with publisher Taylor & Francis. The three-year partnership will enable UNAM researchers to publish OA articles in more than 2,400 journals. OA publishing supports UNAM's ambition to be a leading international hub of excellence in research and innovation, through fostering collaboration and ensuring the latest work can be freely accessed by researchers, policymakers, and practitioners worldwide. Taylor & Francis’ first ‘read & publish’ agreement in Mexico maintains the academic community’s reading ...

NIH scientists test in an animal model a surgical technique to improve cell therapy for dry AMD

2025-05-22
What: National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists have developed a new surgical technique for implanting multiple tissue grafts in the eye's retina. The findings in animals may help advance treatment options for dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which is a leading cause of vision loss among older Americans. A report about the technique published today in JCI Insight.   In diseases such as AMD, the light-sensitive retina tissue at the back of the eye degenerates. Scientists are testing therapies for restoring damaged retinas with grafts of tissue ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Neopred: A dual-phase CT AI tool for preoperative prediction of pathological response in NSCLC

Discovery of ‘mini halo’ points to how the early universe was formed

Attention scan: How our minds shift focus in dynamic settings 

Do you have a nosy coworker? BU research finds snooping colleagues send our stress levels rising

Research explores human factors in general aviation plane crashes

Study reveals mechanisms behind common mutation and prostate cancer

Beyond the big leagues: Concussion care in community sports

Further insights into the consequences of abnormal chromosome numbers

UC Irvine-led team uncovers cell structures that squids use to change their appearance

New research explores how food insecurity affects stress and mental health

New study confirms that the oldest rocks on Earth are in northern Canada

Study finds link between brain injury and criminal behavior

New research aims to better predict and understand cascading land surface hazards

Deeper sleep is more likely to lead to eureka moments

Hadean-age rocks preserved in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, Canada

Novel “digital fossil-mining” approach uncovers hidden fossils, revealing squids’ ancient origins

Review: New framework needed to assess complex “cascading” natural hazards

Flipping an evolutionarily disabled switch unlocks ear tissue regeneration in mice

Ancient squids dominated the ocean 100 million years ago

Public attitudes around solar geoengineering become less politically partisan with more familiarity

COVID-19 pandemic significantly eroded American public’s trust in US public health institutions like the CDC, shows longitudinal assessment from 2020-2024

Extreme droughts in LMICs are associated with increased sexual violence against girls and young women

Scientists capture slow-motion earthquake in action

When ideas travel further than people

British ash woodland is evolving resistance to ash dieback

Aileen Anderson named vice chancellor for research at UC Irvine

MD Anderson Research Highlights for June 26, 2025

Optica Quantum June 2025 issue press tip sheet

New study identifies brain networks underlying psychopathy

A nutritional epigenetics study protocol indicates changes in prenatal ultra-processed food intake may reduce lead and mercury exposures to prevent autism and ADHD

[Press-News.org] Rare binary star system formed when a neutron star orbited inside another star
Summary author: Walter Beckwith