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- LGM-1
- PSR B1919+21: Discovered by Jocelyn Bell Burnell on 28 November 1967, it is the first discovered radio pulsar.
- Kind: Calendar Server
- Environment: Test
- Deployed at https://lgm1.test.timestamps.now/
- Lich
- PSR B1257+12: The first pulsar with planets.
- Kind: Relayer Server
- Environment: Test
- Deployed at https://lich.relayer.test.timestamps.now/
- Hulse-Taylor
- PSR B1913+16: The first binary pulsar, whose orbit is decaying due to the emission of gravitational radiation at the exact rate predicted by general relativity.
- Vela
- Vela Pulsar: The brightest radio pulsar.
- First-MSP
- PSR B1937+21: The first millisecond pulsar.
- Navigator
- PSR J0437-4715: The brightest millisecond pulsar, and the pulsar with the most stable period.
- Cen X-3
- Cen X-3: The first X-ray pulsar.
- SAX
- SAX J1808.4-3658: The first accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar.
- Asteroid
- PSR J0738-4042: The first pulsar observed to have been affected by asteroids.
- The Double
- PSR J0737-3039: The first double pulsar binary system.
- Terzan
- PSR J1748-2446ad: The shortest period pulsar, with a period of ~0.0014 seconds or ~1.4 milliseconds (716 times a second).
- Sleeper
- PSR J0901-4046: The longest period neutron star pulsar, with a period of 75.9 seconds.
- AR Sco
- AR Scorpii: The longest period pulsar, at 118.2 seconds, as well as one of the only known two white dwarf pulsars.
- AE Aqr
- AE Aquarii: The first white dwarf pulsar.
- The Trio
- PSR J0337+1715: The first millisecond pulsar with 2 stellar mass companions.
- Hibernator
- PSR J1841-0500: Stopped pulsing for 580 days. One of only two pulsars known to have stopped pulsing for more than a few minutes.
- Part-Timer
- PSR B1931+24: Pulses for about a week and stops pulsing for about a month.
- Swift
- Swift J0243.6+6124: The most magnetic pulsar with 1.6×10^13 G.
- Black Widow
- PSR J0952-0607: The heaviest pulsar with 2.35 M☉.
- Eccentric
- PSR J1903+0327: A ~2.15 ms pulsar discovered to be in a highly eccentric binary star system with a Sun-like star.
- Einstein
- PSR J2007+2722: A 40.8-hertz 'recycled' isolated pulsar was the first pulsar found by volunteers on data taken in February 2007 and analyzed by distributed computing project Einstein@Home.
- Redback
- PSR J1311-3430: The first millisecond pulsar discovered via gamma-ray pulsations and part of a binary system with the shortest orbital period.
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