Fermi Mission Coverage

    Fermi Space Telescope Unveils Dozen New Pulsars

    artist concept of a pulsar This image shows an artist's concept of a pulsar. Pulsars discovered by Fermi are causing scientists to reevaluate how the dead stars behave. Credit: NASA/Dana Berry GREENBELT, Md. -- NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has discovered 12 new gamma-ray-only pulsars and has detected gamma-ray pulses from 18 others. The finds are transforming our understanding of how these stellar cinders work.

    "We know of 1,800 pulsars, but until Fermi we saw only little wisps of energy from all but a handful of them," says Roger Romani of Stanford University, Calif. "Now, for dozens of pulsars, we're seeing the actual power of these machines."

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    Fermi Space Telescope: Exploring the Extreme Universe
    Fermi is a powerful space observatory that will open a wide window on the universe. Gamma rays are the highest-energy form of light, and the gamma-ray sky is spectacularly different from the one we perceive with our own eyes. With a huge leap in all key capabilities, Fermi data will enable scientists to answer persistent questions across a broad range of topics, including supermassive black-hole systems, pulsars, the origin of cosmic rays, and searches for signals of new physics.

    The mission is an astrophysics and particle physics partnership, developed by NASA in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy, along with important contributions from academic institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, and the United States.

Features

Fermi Unveils Dozen New Pulsars

artist concept of a pulsar

The Fermi Space Telescope has discovered 12 new gamma-ray-only pulsars and detected pulses from 18 others.

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Fermi Telescope Discovers Gamma-Ray-Only Pulsar

Gamma rays emitted from clouds of charged particles along the pulsar's magnetic field lines

A 10,000-year-old stellar corpse, called a pulsar, is the first one known that only "blinks" in gamma rays, as discovered by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.

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GLAST named after Nobel Laureate Enrico Fermi

Artist's concept of GLAST

At a teleconference on Aug. 26, 2008, NASA announced it was giving a new name to the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope, launched June 11, 2008.

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