[00:00:00.02]
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[No Audio]
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[00:00:04.06]
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[Bwaaam]
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[00:00:08.11]
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[Bwaaam]
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[00:00:12.12]
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[Bwaam] When we started watching it, we
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[00:00:16.15]
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had no idea how dynamic this system was. [Music]
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[Music]
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[00:00:24.20]
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We still don't know what it's capable of. [Whoosh]
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[00:00:28.25]
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[Bwaaam] The only way these readings make
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[00:00:32.28]
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sense is if this pulsar is orbiting a star.
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[00:00:36.34]
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We've never seen one in an orbit this long. The binary
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[00:00:40.34]
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companion is one of the brightest stars in our galaxy, and the pulsar is going to
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[00:00:44.36]
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pass incredibly close to it! This pulsar has been
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[00:00:48.43]
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accelerating for the last ten years, and it's still speeding up.
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[00:00:52.45]
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[Bwaam]
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[00:00:56.54]
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When it passes through the companion star's disk, we're gonna see some serious
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[00:01:00.57]
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gamma-ray emission. Fermi will be watching in
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[00:01:04.62]
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gamma rays. It has the tools.
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[00:01:08.68]
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[Music]
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[00:01:12.73]
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[Music]
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[00:01:16.78]
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There's so much we can learn from this.
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[00:01:20.84]
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[Music]
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[00:01:24.88]
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[Wwraum]
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[00:01:28.90]
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We're going to need a bigger hard drive
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[00:01:32.94]
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[Wwraum] [indistinct radio voices]
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[00:01:37.01]
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[indistinct radio voices]
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[00:01:41.05]
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[Beeping]
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[00:01:45.12]
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[Beeping]
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[00:01:49.17]
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[Beeping]
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