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Jocelyn Bell Burnell spotted a mysterious repeating signal every 1 point 3 seconds and discovered pulsars
Science
Published on 6 May 2026

It was dismissed as scruff before it changed everything
In 1967, graduate student Jocelyn Bell Burnell rechecked radio telescope recordings and noticed a bizarre, perfectly repeating pulse that returned every 1.3 seconds. Teammates initially brushed it off as “scruff,” but its consistency didn’t match anything known. The signal became the first evidence of neutron stars, unveiling pulsars and rewriting astronomy’s map of the sky.
- Jocelyn Bell Burnell found a repeating 1.3 second signal
- The odd data was initially dismissed as “scruff”
- The discovery provided the first evidence of neutron stars
- It revealed a whole new class of objects: pulsars
Read the full story at The Economic Times
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
