this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2023
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[Googles name of object.] 2nd result:
Science!
Read the article:
Just because some random Google result says it’s a magnetar doesn’t make it true. Considering the team that discovered it doesn’t make that claim and as far as I’m aware no one else has looked at this particular star, I think it unlikely that there’s a definitive, widely accepted explanation.
This is why I don't trust Google excerpt results or Ai answers despite being widely accepted. They miss nuance
These days I feel like they're flat out wrong nearly a third of the time
Magnetars are the most terrifyingly fascinating objects so far discovered. I'm cool with black holes having the ability to spaghettify me, that makes sense, that's what gravity at an almost infinite scale does. Having something that generates a magnetic field strong enough to dis-associate my molecules I find very disconcerting.
Throw me at one at 0.99c.
That's the most likely answer, but they're not certain. As they don't even have a solid theory of how a star can spin so slowly and still be this active.