Vale1219
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Hello!
I just want to know how does a pulsar die, if it dies someday...?
I just want to know how does a pulsar die, if it dies someday...?

The discussion centers on the mechanisms and processes involved in the death of pulsars, exploring various types of pulsars, their energy sources, and potential end states. It encompasses theoretical aspects of stellar evolution and the physical phenomena associated with pulsar behavior.
Participants express multiple competing views on the processes leading to the death of pulsars, with no consensus reached on a singular mechanism or outcome.
Some claims depend on specific definitions of pulsar types and their energy sources, and there are unresolved aspects regarding the exact conditions under which pulsars cease to emit radiation.

And, #4. Some Pulsars (neutron stars) that are accreting matter from a companion will build enough mass to pass the ~3.2 solar mass "Oppenheimer limit" (upper limit for Neutron stars) and can collapse causing a supernova and/or Black Hole.Janus said:There are three types of pulsars all three are neutron stars:
Rotational
X-ray (or Accretion)
magnetars.
Rotational Pulsars generate their radiation from their rotation, which means as time goes by, their rotation slows. So this type of pulsar "dies" when it has given up all its rotational energy.
X-ray Pulsars form when a neutron star has a binary companion. When the companion, in the course of passing through its life, begins to expand, It can leak material to the Neutron star as accretion matter. It is this accreation matter that provides the energy for the pulses. Such a pulsar would "die" when it ran out of accretion matter. (though the accretion matter can add angular momentum to the neutron star and "spin it up" so that it now becomes a rotational pulsar, which eventually dies in the manner of these types of pulsars.)
Magnetars get their energy from the decay of a very strong magnetic field. So these pulsars "die" when the field has decayed to a low enough level.