Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Mazanec
They are only millions of miles apart to radiate gravity waves strong enough to collide in a reasonable length of time, like PSR B1913+16 (exactly when WILL it collide, BTW?). Yet their stars must have been large red giants, if not supergiants, to become pulsars, much larger than their separations. And they must have supernovaed, so why weren't the systems blown apart? BTW, do we have GR tests on other binary pulsars (and when will THEY collide, if we do?)?
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Tom. Antoniseb's scenario is certainly valid, but it's not the only one. Pulsars are often kicked to high transverse/radial velocities. Extended gas clouds often form multiple stars with matched magnetic polarizations (Steve Strom, UMass). Supernovae in such groups should eject pulsars in similar directions.(Parity, Pulsars and Supernova Remnants. Vassar 92) Those not exceeding galactic escape velocities (~285 km/sec), will travel to the galactic halo, and orbit within it, passing through the galactic plane. Nothing precludes two of these objects from finding common space, and capturing each other in a gravitational dance...except the slim statistics..but that's not forbidding.pete.