Context:
Indian scientists, including researchers from IIT-Kanpur, have developed a new technique using pulsars to measure vast cosmic distances with improved accuracy.
Key Highlights:
- Scientific Principle / Innovation
- Uses distortion of pulsar radio emissions to calculate distances
- Combines:
- Dispersion Measure (DM)
- Scatter Broadening
- Research Details
- Study conducted on 10 pulsars in the Gum Nebula region
- Helps identify turbulent plasma distribution between Earth and pulsars
- Technical Mechanism
- Radio waves passing through interstellar medium (plasma) get altered
- DM measures electron density along path
- Scatter broadening measures signal distortion due to turbulence
- Stakeholders Involved
- Indian research institutions (IIT-Kanpur)
- Global astrophysics community
- Space research organizations
- Significance / Applications
- Provides more accurate cosmic distance measurements
- Overcomes limitations of parallax method (distance constraints)
- Can potentially measure distances beyond the Milky Way
- Key Discovery Insight
- Confirmed that Vela Pulsar lies behind Gum Nebula’s front shell
- Improved electron distribution model of the nebula
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Pulsars: Rapidly rotating neutron stars emitting periodic radio waves.
- Dispersion Measure (DM): Indicates number of free electrons between Earth and pulsar.
- Scatter Broadening: Signal distortion due to interstellar turbulence.
- Interstellar Medium: Matter (gas, plasma, dust) between stars.
- Gum Nebula: A large emission nebula in the Milky Way.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Science & Technology:
- Enhances precision in astrophysical measurements
- Strengthens India’s role in space research and innovation
- Applications:
- Useful in gravitational wave detection (via pulsar timing arrays)
- Improves cosmological mapping and understanding of universe structure
- Comparative Advantage:
- Unlike parallax, method has no strict distance limitation
- Better accounts for interstellar medium distortions
- Strategic Importance:
- Boosts India’s capabilities in deep-space research
- Contributes to global scientific collaborations
- Way Forward
- Expand research to larger pulsar datasets
- Integrate with global observatories and telescopes
- Invest in radio astronomy infrastructure
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 3: Science & Technology – Space research, astrophysics
• Prelims: Basic astronomy concepts
