# Pulsar Planets: The Universe's Most Extreme Worlds

# Pulsar Planets: The Universe's Most Extreme Worlds

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating one of the most romantically timed astronomical events in modern history: **June 7th, 1992 – the discovery of the first exoplanet orbiting a pulsar.** Now, you might be thinking, "Wait, a pulsar? Those cosmic lighthouses made of neutron star stuff?" Yes! And that's what makes this absolutely wild. Astronomers Aleksander Wolszczan and Dale Frail discovered not one, but TWO planets orbiting PSR B1257+12, a pulsar located about 2,300 light-years away in the constellation Virgo. Picture this: these aren't your typical, life-harboring Earth-like worlds basking in the warm glow of a sun. No, no, no. These planets are orbiting a rapidly spinning neutron star – a stellar corpse so dense that a teaspoon of its material would weigh as much as Mount Everest! The pulsar is blasting these planets with intense radiation and spinning 160 times per second. It's like living next to a cosmic strobe light that's also trying to obliterate everything around it. What's even more incredible? These discoveries proved that planets could form in the most extreme, violent environments imaginable. It fundamentally changed our understanding of planetary formation and suggested that worlds might be far more common throughout the universe than we'd dared to dream. Be sure to **subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast** for more cosmic discoveries! If you want additional information, check out **QuietPlease.ai**. Thank you for listening to another Quiet Please Production!

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Jaksot(581)

**The 1761 Venus Transit: Measuring the Solar System**

**The 1761 Venus Transit: Measuring the Solar System**

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Welcome, stargazers! Today, June 6th, marks one of the most dramatic celestial events in astronomical history—the Transit of Venus...

6 Kesä 2min

**Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: Jupiter's Cosmic Collision of 1994**

**Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: Jupiter's Cosmic Collision of 1994**

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Tonight, we're celebrating one of the most awe-inspiring moments in modern astronomical history: **June 5th, 1994** — the day Come...

5 Kesä 1min

# 1761 Venus Transit: The First Global Scientific Collaboration

# 1761 Venus Transit: The First Global Scientific Collaboration

# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. **The Venus Transit of June 4, 1761: When Venus Crossed the Sun's Face** Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating one of the most momentous observa...

4 Kesä 2min

**Ed White's Historic First American Spacewalk: June 3, 1965**

**Ed White's Historic First American Spacewalk: June 3, 1965**

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Tonight, we're celebrating one of the most iconic moments in the history of space exploration that occurred on June 3rd – and boy,...

3 Kesä 1min

# Venus Transit of 1882: Measuring the Solar System

# Venus Transit of 1882: Measuring the Solar System

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Welcome back, stargazers! Today we're celebrating one of the most pivotal moments in modern astronomy—and it happened right here o...

24 Maalis 1min

# Arthur Auwers: The Meticulous Star Mapper Who Built Celestial GPS

# Arthur Auwers: The Meticulous Star Mapper Who Built Celestial GPS

# Astronomy Tonight Podcast This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Welcome, stargazers! Today, March 23rd, marks a truly fascinating date in astronomical history. On this very date in 1882, the *Ge...

23 Maalis 1min

Hubble's Flawed Vision: From Disaster to Discovery

Hubble's Flawed Vision: From Disaster to Discovery

# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating a truly monumental moment in space exploration history—March 22nd, the day the Hubble Space Telescope was l...

22 Maalis 1min

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