This is Scientific American's 60-Second Space. I'm John Matson. Got a minute?
It's pretty rare to find a scientific study that acknowledges key contributions from individuals who go by names like "IG_the_cheetah" and "Revoluzzer."
But Ig and Rev were big helps in finding previously unknown pulsars in our own Milky Way galaxy, 24 of them.
The discovery is in the Astrophysical Journal.
A pulsar is the rapidly rotating ultra-dense remnant of a collapsed massive star.
Imagine the mass of the sun, compressed to the diameter of a medium-size city, spinning faster than a DVD.
The new pulsars were found by the distributed computing project Einstein@Home.
It uses idle computing time on the PCs of thousands of volunteer users, like Ig and Rev to scan telescope data for pulsar signals.
In this case the data were more than a decade old, but still contained a few hidden gems,
such as the pulsars that have now been unearthed, if you will, for astronomers to study in greater detail.
You too can lend your spare computer power to the pulsar hunt.
Einstein@Home even runs on Android devices.
So your smartphone could help make us all smarter.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Space. I'm John Matson.
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