http://nho.ohn.free.fr/celestia/Cham/PSRJ0737-3039.zip
I'm starting a new small addon project about extreme pulsars. Let me present you PSR J0737-3039 A and B, husband and wife in real life !
Video link :
http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/news/doublepuls ... 20x256.mpg
Take note : that video is coming from a web site about those pulsars. It's NOT from Celestia !
From the internet :
Hulse and Taylor won the Nobel Prize in 1993 for the discovery of the first binary pulsar in 1974. It has a period of 59 milliseconds but shows an orbital period of 7 hours and 45 minutes. Discovered at Arecibo, it was an important test of general relativity. There have been about 40 binary pulsars discovered to date.
An exciting close binary was reported in Nature in December 2003 and in Science in early 2004. With the cumbersome designation PSR J0737-3039A, it is composed of pulsars with an eccentric orbit of period just 2.4 hours! The most active of the pulsars spins 44 times per second and its companion just once in 2.8 seconds. Irion in Science described the pair as "two pulsars in a tight orbital embrace, blasting each other with radiation as they spiral toward a mutual doom." General relativity calculations reportedly suggest a convergence of the two pulsars by about 7 millimeters/day with a projected crash in about 85 million years.
At just 2000 light years distance, this binary pulsar is relatively close. It's orbit is almost edge-on from the Earth, optimum for viewing. Part of the promise of this dramatic pair is information about relativistic theories of the gravitational interaction. The discovery of this binary pulsar is credited to the 64-meter Parkes radio telescope in New South Wales, Australia. The measurement of the slower period of the companion is credited to Jodrell Bank Observatory in Macclesfield, U.K.
Three interesting pages on this fascinating couple :
Wikipedia :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0737-3039
More serious stuff :
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/news/press/double_pulsar/
http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/news/double-ag/