What’s Inside a ‘Dead’ Star?

Matter makes up all the stuff we can see in the universe, from pencils to people to planets. But there’s still a lot we don’t understand about it! For example: How does matter work when it’s about to become a black hole? We can’t learn anything about matter after it becomes a black hole, because it’s hidden behind the event horizon, the point of no return. So we turn to something we can study – the incredibly dense matter inside a neutron star, the leftover of an exploded massive star that wasn’t quite big enough to turn into a black hole.

Neutron star GIF
Neutron stars, like the one here in this artist’s concept, are the dense remnants of massive stars that exploded in supernovae. Matter in their cores is on the verge of collapsing into a black hole.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

NICER (Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer)is an X-ray telescope perched on the International Space Station. NICER was designed to study and measure the sizes and masses of neutron stars to help us learn more about what might be going on in their mysterious cores.

GIF of NICER
This time-lapse loop shows NASA’s NICER (Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer) slewing to track pulsars and other X-ray sources from atop the International Space Station. Behind it, the station’s giant solar arrays track the Sun. The motion is sped up 100 times.
NASA

When a star many times the mass of our Sun runs out of fuel, it collapses under its own weight and then bursts into a supernova. What’s left behind depends on the star’s initial mass. Heavier stars (around 25 times the Sun’s mass or more) leave behind black holes. Lighter ones (between about eight and 25 times the Sun’s mass) leave behind neutron stars.

Supernova GIF
When a star that is eight times larger than the sun ends its life, it does not go gentle into that good night. Shifting pressure in its core causes it to collapse and trigger a supernova, as shown here. The initial flash of light, which can outshine the star’s host galaxy, may last only seconds. But the resulting debris that is flung into space can be studied for millennia.
Courtesy of ESA/Hubble/L. Calçada

Neutron stars pack more mass than the Sun into a sphere about as wide as New York City’s Manhattan Island is long. Just one teaspoon of neutron star matter would weigh as much as Mount Everest, the highest mountain on Earth!

GIF of neutron star compared to Manhattan
A neutron star is the densest object astronomers can observe directly, crushing half a million times Earth's mass into a sphere similar in size to Manhattan Island, as shown in this artist’s concept.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

These objects have a lot of cool physics going on. They can spin faster than the blades in a blender, and they have powerful magnetic fields. In fact, neutron stars are the strongest magnets in the universe! The magnetic fields can rip particles off the star’s surface and then smack them down on another part of the star. The constant bombardment creates hot spots at the magnetic poles. When the star rotates, the hot spots swing in and out of our view like the beams of a lighthouse.

Magnetic field GIF
This simulation shows a possible quadrupole magnetic field configuration for a pulsar with hot spots in the only the southern hemisphere.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Neutron stars are so dense that they warp nearby space-time, like a bowling ball resting on a trampoline. The warping effect is so strong that it can redirect light from the star’s far side into our view. This has the odd effect of making the star look bigger than it really is!

Lensing GIF
NICER observes X-ray light from the surfaces of neutron stars. In these strong-gravity environments, shown in this artist’s concept, light paths are distorted so that NICER can see emission from the star's far side, especially for smaller, denser stars.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

NICER uses all the cool physics happening on and around neutron stars to learn more about what’s happening inside those stars, where matter lingers on the threshold of becoming a black hole. (We should mention that NICER also studies black holes!)

Scientists think that neutron stars are layered a bit like golf balls. At the surface, there’s a really thin (just a couple centimeters high) atmosphere of hydrogen or helium. In the outer core, atoms have broken down into their building blocks – protons, neutrons, and electrons – and the immense pressure has squished most of the protons and electrons together to form a sea of mostly neutrons.

But what’s going on in the inner core of neutron stars? Physicists have lots of theories. In some traditional models, scientists suggested the stars were neutrons all the way down. Others proposed that neutrons break down into their own, even smaller building blocks, called quarks. And then some suggest that those quarks could recombine to form new types of particles that aren’t neutrons!

Neutron star interior GIF
This stylized animation shows the structure of a neutron star. The states of matter at neutron stars' inner cores remain a mystery. NICER will confront nuclear physics theory with unique measurements, exploring the exotic states of matter within neutron stars through rotation-resolved X-ray spectroscopy.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

NICER is helping us figure things out by measuring the sizes and masses of neutron stars. Scientists use those numbers to calculate the stars’ density, which tells us how squeezable matter is!

Let’s say you have what scientists think of as a typical neutron star, weighing about 1.4 times the Sun’s mass. If you measure the size of the star, and it’s big, then that might mean it contains more whole neutrons. If instead it’s small, then that might mean the neutrons have broken down into quarks. The tinier pieces can be packed together more tightly.

Compacting GIF
This animation shows how neutron stars with the same mass could be larger or smaller depending on the state of the particles inside. If the star is made of neutrons, the star will be larger. But if the same mass was instead made of smaller pieces, like quarks, then they can be packed into a tighter region.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

NICER measured the sizes of two neutron stars, called PSR J0030+0451 and PSR J0740+6620, or J0030 and J0740 for short.

J0030 is about 1.4 times the Sun’s mass and 16 miles across. (It also taught us that neutron star hot spots might not always be where we thought.) J0740 is about 2.1 times the Sun’s mass and is also about 16 miles across. So J0740 has about 50% more mass than J0030 but is about the same size! This tells us that the matter in neutron stars is less squeezable than some scientists predicted. (Remember, some physicists suggest that the added mass would crush all the neutrons and make a smaller star.) And J0740’s mass and size together challenge models where the star is neutrons all the way down.

J0740 GIF
This model shows J0740, a neutron star that is about 1.4 times the mass of the Sun. Researchers found that it has two circular hot spots almost directly opposite each other.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

So what’s in the heart of a neutron star? We’re still not sure. Scientists will have to use NICER’s observations to develop new models, perhaps where the cores of neutron stars contain a mix of both neutrons and weirder matter, like quarks. We’ll have to keep measuring neutron stars to learn more!

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