15
October 1974
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded Professor
Martin Ryle and Professor Antony Hewish the 1974 Nobel Prize in
Physics. Professors Ryle and Hewish have been awarded the Prize
for their pioneering research in radioastrophysics: Ryle for his observations
and inventions, in particular of the aperture-synthesis technique, and Hewish
for his decisive role in the discovery of pulsars.
THE
PHYSICS OF THE STARS
Astrophysics, the science dealing with the physical
properties of the stars and the stellar systems, has developed rapidly during
recent decades. This is mainly due to new discoveries made with radio astronomical
methods. These methods are of vital importance when making observations over cosmic
distances, thousands of millions of lightyears or more. It is essential that such
distances can be covered when trying to chart the development of the universe.
A light year is the distance that light travels in one year. Light moves at a
speed of 300 pillion metres per second.
In contrast to visible light
coming to us from the celestial sphere, radio emission from other space can only
be perceived with the help of telescopes. Highly sensitive electronic instruments
amplify and handle the data-processing of the signals.
SEVERAL SMALL
TELESCOPES "FORM" ONE LARGE TELESCOPE
During
the last twenty-five years, Martin Ryle has developed new epochmaking telescope
constructions and registration principles. With the help of these he has explored
the radio sources of the universe and gradually achieved greater and greater accuracy
in the determination of direction. Definition is now so good that in the case
of visible light it corresponds to an observer on earth being able to see the
details of a postage stamp on the moon, Ryle has developed a technique - the aperture
synthesis technique - which means that with the help of a number of small telescopes,
whose positions are mutually adjustable within a distance of nearly 5 kilometers
he can achieve a precision equalling that obtainable by having the whole area
covered by a single vast telescope, a construction which is technically not possible.
Ryle also makes use here of the rotation of the earth to change telescopic positions
in relation to the celestial sphere.
The wealth of detail in the
charting of the universe carried out in recent years with this apparatus is absolutely
unique. For a number of years Ryle has been making observations with his various
instruments that have been of crucial significance in the study of the physical
characteristics of stars and stellar systems and for cosmology, the study of the
development of the universe as a whole.
THE PULSARS
In the summer of 1967 Antony Hewish started a series of observations which soon
led to an extremely interesting and quite unforeseen discovery. Some radio sources
in space, later given the name "pulsars", emitted radio signals - pulses - which
were repeated extremely regularly at intervals of a second or so. As a result
of this discovery it has been possible to establish the presence of so-called
neutron stars in the universe, something that scientists have been speculating
about ever since the Thirties. Neutron stars are bodies which are extremely heavy,
in comparison to their size - about 10 kilometres in diameter. One cubic centimetre
of neutron-star matter of which the pulsars consist, weighs millions of tons!
The observed emission from a pulsar shows that they must have a magnetic field
which is extraordinarily strong many millions of times stronger than any magnetic
field used in the laboratories on earth. Every signal from the pulsars corresponds
to enormous quantities of energy. It is probable that the neutron star, which
is the "nucleus" of a pulsar, surrounds itself with a plasma, a gas conducting
electricity, and the whole system including the magnetic field rotates. The pulsar
is then perceived from the earth as a radio beacon!
The best known
pulsar is to be found in the Crab Nebula. This nebula consists of a glowing cloud
of gas, the remains of a stellar explosion, which according to Chinese records
took place in 1054 A.D. It is one of the most interesting phenomena in the heavens.
It has been found that its centre, from which it expands, contains a pulsar emitting
not only radio pulses but also light pulses and X-ray pulses.
The
discovery of the pulsars is of paramount importance to physics and astrophysics.
The pulsars play a vital role in the genesis of the elements and the chemical
development of the galaxies. New avenues have been opened up for studying the
properties of matter under very extreme conditions.
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