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  2. PSR B1919+21 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_B1919+21

    PSR B1919+21 is a pulsar with a period of 1.3373 seconds [4] and a pulse width of 0.04 seconds. Discovered by Jocelyn Bell Burnell on 28 November 1967, it is the first discovered radio pulsar. [ 5 ] The power and regularity of the signals were briefly thought to resemble an extraterrestrial beacon , leading the source to be nicknamed LGM ...

  3. PSR J1748−2446ad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J1748%E2%88%922446ad

    PSR J1748−2446ad is the fastest-spinning pulsar known, at 716 Hz (times per second), [2] or 42,960 revolutions per minute.This pulsar was discovered by Jason W. T. Hessels of McGill University on November 10, 2004, and confirmed on January 8, 2005.

  4. PSR J0437−4715 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0437%E2%88%924715

    PSR J0437−4715 is a pulsar. Discovered in the Parkes 70 cm survey, [5] it remains the closest and brightest millisecond pulsar (MSP) known. The pulsar rotates about its axis 173.7 times per second and therefore completes a rotation every 5.75 milliseconds. It emits a searchlight-like radio beam that sweeps past the Earth each time it rotates.

  5. PSR J0952–0607 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0952–0607

    PSR J0952–0607 is a massive millisecond pulsar in a binary system, located between 3,200–5,700 light-years (970–1,740 pc) from Earth in the constellation Sextans. [6] It holds the record for being the most massive neutron star known as of 2022, with a mass 2.35 ± 0.17 times that of the Sun—potentially close to the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff mass upper limit for neutron stars.

  6. Millisecond pulsar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millisecond_pulsar

    Spinning roughly 641 times per second, it remains the second fastest-spinning millisecond pulsar of the approximately 200 that have been discovered. [7] Pulsar PSR J1748-2446ad , discovered in 2004, is the fastest-spinning pulsar known, as of 2023, spinning 716 times per second.

  7. PSR J1748-2021B - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J1748-2021B

    PSR J1748-2021B is the most massive known pulsar, initially calculated with 2.74 +0.21 −0.21 M ☉.It was first discovered by Freire [1] using the Green Bank Telescope S band receiver and Pulsar Spigot Spectrometer in Terzan 5 of globular cluster M-5.