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Craig Markwardt of the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center will speak on “Caught in the Act:What Accreting Millisecond Pulsars Tell Us about Galactic Ecology” noon Friday in Gagnon Lecture Hall, Hugel Science Center room 100.

The lecture is sponsored by the Physics Club, which will provide free pizza and drinks.

The talk description: “Stars and star systems can undergo significant change after they die. Massive stars in binary systems often form neutron stars, which in turn can accrete from their binary companions. It has long been expected that mass accretion would spin up neutron stars to very high spin rate pulsars, but until recently it has not been possible to detect that spin. Through careful monitoring, four new millisecond accreting pulsars have been detected, which confirm this theory and point to the way that isolated radio millisecond pulsars are formed.”

A pulsar is any of several celestial radio sources emitting short, intense bursts of radio waves, x-rays, or visible electromagnetic radiation at regular intervals, generally believed to be rotating neutron stars.

Markwardt earned a Ph.D. in physics from University of Wisconsin, Madison in 1997 and a B.S. with honors from Stanford University in 1992.

Previous Physics Club talks in 2003-04:

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