Astronomers Detect Violent Pulsar 7,500 Light-Years Away From Earth

American space agency NASA announced last week that using its Chandra X-ray Observatory, astronomers were successful in findings a large clump of stellar material that has been jettisoned away from a double star system at incredibly high speeds.

NASA experts associated with the finding stated that during this cosmic event when the pulsar moves around the star, it emits disk fragments at a speed of 6.4 million kilometers per hour.

Chandra X-ray Observatory located this bizarre event in the double star system B1259, which contains a star that is three times more massive than our Sun.

Experts said the star and the pulsar surrounding it create a galactic entanglement, which is responsible for changing the characteristics of its solar system.

According to George Pavlov, scientists from Penn State University in State College, Pennsylvania, the two objects are in a rare phenomenon in the universe, which has provide them with an opportunity to witness something special happening in the outer space.

He said the results show that the newly discovered binary are having an unusual cosmic arrangement and is providing important insights into something special.

The agency experts noted that as the pulsar violently moves around the star, it appears to be moving faster and faster as the time passes by. Experts affirmed that when they first detected the activity, the speed of the pulsar was just about 7 % of the speed of light. But when they observed it again this year, its speed increased by 15 % of the speed of light.