31 October 2025 to 2 November 2025
MacKinnon Building
Canada/Eastern timezone

The masses and radii of the neutron stars observed by NICER

2 Nov 2025, 11:45
40m
113 (MacKinnon Building)

113

MacKinnon Building

Speaker

Sharon Morsink (University of Alberta)

Description

Neutron stars are the densest known gravitationally-stable objects in the Universe. Their strong gravitational fields, rapid rotation rates, and supra-nuclear central densities allow for a fascinating interplay between general relativistic effects and nuclear physics theory. Pulse-profile modeling is a technique that uses the gravitationally-lensed X-ray flux emitted from hot spots on the neutron star's surface to infer its mass and radius. General relativity is a crucial ingredient in this analysis. The Neutron Star Interior Composition ExploreR (NICER) is a NASA X-ray telescope mounted on the International Space Station. NICER is a timing instrument designed to make the measurements required to implement pulse-profile modelling. In this talk, I will give an overview of how NICER data is used to infer a neutron star's radius (and its mass), along with the latest results and future observations of other pulsars.

Author

Sharon Morsink (University of Alberta)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.