Volunteers Find Rare Pulsar – MAYBE
Fascinating story over the weekend from Bruce Allen . A volunteer in Iowa and one in Germany running BOINC , Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing application software for Einstein@home found a pulsar, sometimes referred to as a black hole in space. Not just any pulsar thank you. Scientists aren’t sure yet but they think it could be a disrupted recycled pulsar. These are very rare. You can keep track of developments on this story by following the Einstein@home website.
Here is a quote from the story.
I want to share some good news with you.
For more than a year, Einstein@Home has been using about
one-third of the available computer time to search for radio
pulsars in data from the Arecibo Observatory. I’m happy to report
that we found our first radio pulsar last month: PSR J2007+2722.
It is still not sure, but this appears to be a rare type of object
called a Disrupted Recycled Pulsar. The discovery was published
on-line by the journal Science, on Thursday August 12th.Congratulations to our volunteers Chris and Helen Colvin (Ames, Iowa,
USA) and Daniel Gebhardt (Universitaet Mainz, Musikinformatik, Germany),
whose computers discovered the pulsar with the highest significance!Further details of this first Einstein@Home discovery may be found
in the main news item posted on the Einstein@Home web site, at
http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu/ . You can also use Google News
and similar searches, with keywords like ‘pulsar’ or ‘J2007+2722′
or ‘Einstein@Home’ to find recent news articles about the
discovery, in English, German, French, Spanish, Russian and other
languages.
See People’s Astronomy on this blog for some amazing things that volunteers are doing. See Introduction to BOINC to find out how to get started.
See Old 770Zs Never Die for the connection between old computers (running Linux) and worthwhile science projects.
You will also find a reference to General Douglas MacArthur whose famous “old soldiers never die” comment to Congress in April 1951 inspired the title.
Connection to net neutrality
Public interest groups such as American Library Association support network neutrality.
Network Neutrality (or “net” neutrality) is the concept of online non-discrimination. It is the principle that consumers/citizens should be free to get access to – or to provide – the Internet content and services they wish, and that consumer access should not be regulated based on the nature or source of that content or service. Information providers – which may be websites, online services, etc., and who may be affiliated with traditional commercial enterprises but who also may be individual citizens, libraries, schools, or nonprofit entities – should have essentially the same quality of access to distribute their offerings. “Pipe” owners (carriers) should not be allowed to charge some information providers more money for the same pipes, or establish exclusive deals that relegate everyone else (including small noncommercial or startup entities) to an Internet “slow lane.” This principle should hold true even when a broadband provider is providing Internet carriage to a competitor.
Thanks to the American Library Association for that quote. The ‘professional left’ whoever they are are afraid that big corporations are going to ruin the Internet. The anti-intellectual right thinks that net neutrality is a plot by the Obama administration.
For the moment let us stop the political rhetoric and look at net neutrality in practical terms as related to volunteers running BOINC work units. Volunteers do not expect to make any money. The organizations running the science projects i.e. universities, Laboratories, agencies, etc. do not have extra money to guarantee fast Internet access. Guess who loses if network neutrality dies.
Posted by The GNUinator


