Neutron stars are formed when massive stars exhaust their nuclear fuel and undergo a supernova explosion. During the explosion, the outer layers of the star are ejected into space, while the core collapses under its own gravity. If the core's mass is between about 1.4 and 3 times the mass of the Sun, it will collapse into a neutron star.
**Incredibly Dense**: Neutron stars are incredibly dense, with densities exceeding that of atomic nuclei. A sugar-cube-sized amount of neutron-starmaterial would weigh about 100 million tons on Earth.
**Small Size**: Despite their immense mass, neutron stars are relatively small, with diameters of only about 10-20 kilometers.
**Rapid Rotation**: Neutron stars can rotate very rapidly, with some completing hundreds of rotations per second, giving rise to pulsars, which are rapidly spinning neutron stars that emit beams of radiation.
**Pulsars**: Some neutron stars emit beams of radiation from their magnetic poles, creating the appearance of pulsing signals as the beams sweep across our line of sight.
**Gravitational Waves**: Neutron stars in close binary systems can emit gravitational waves as they orbit each other, which can be detected by gravitational wave observatories.
Study Tips:
Understand the processes of stellar evolution and the conditions required for the formation of neutron stars.
Explain how Earth's fluid outer core creates the magnetosphere and how this helps protect both humans and technology (such as satellites) from solar winds.