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Gamma-Ray
Burst Offers First Peek at a Young Galaxy's Star Factory
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Hi-Res
Version
This
image merges Swift optical (blue, green) and X-ray views of
GRB 080607. The white spot at center is the burst’s
optical afterglow.
Credit:
NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler
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Hi-Res
Version
GRB
080607 exploded June 7, 2008, in the constellation Coma
Berenices. The box indicates the sky area shown in the Swift
image.
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Credit:
DSS/STScI/AURA
Astronomers combining data
from NASA's Swift satellite, the W. M. Keck Observatory in
Hawaii, and other facilities have, for the first time, identified
gas molecules in the host galaxy of a gamma-ray burst.
The
explosion, designated GRB 080607, occurred in June. "This
burst gave us the opportunity to 'taste' the star-forming gas in
a young galaxy more than 11 billion light-years away," says
University of California, Santa Cruz, professor Xavier Prochaska.
The finding provides insight into star formation when the
universe was about one-sixth its present age.
Gamma-ray
bursts -- the universe's most luminous explosions -- create
bright afterglows. Their light encodes information about the gas
and dust it encounters on its way to Earth.
"We
clearly see absorption from two molecular gases: hydrogen and
carbon monoxide. Those are gases we associate with star-forming
regions in our own galaxy," Prochaska says. The team
believes that the burst exploded behind a thick molecular cloud
similar to those that spawn stars in our galaxy today.
Gamma
rays from GRB 080607 triggered Swift's Burst Alert Telescope
shortly after 2:07 a.m. EDT on June 7, 2008. Swift calculated the
burst's position, beamed the location to a network of
observatories, and turned to study the afterglow.
That
night, University of California, Berkeley, professor Joshua Bloom
and graduate students Daniel Perley and Adam Miller were using
the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer on the 10m Keck I
Telescope in Hawaii. "Because afterglows fade rapidly, we
really had to scramble when we received the alert," Perley
says. "But in less than 15 minutes, we were on target and
collecting data."
A pair of robotic observatories
also responded quickly. The NASA-supported Peters Automated
Infrared Imaging Telescope (PAIRITEL) on Mount Hopkins, Ariz.,
and the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT) at Lick
Observatory on Mount Hamilton, Calif., observed the burst's
afterglow within three minutes of Swift's alert.
The
spectrum from Keck established that the explosion took place 11.5
billion light-years away. GRB 080607 blew up when the universe
was just 2.2 billion years old.
The molecular cloud in
the burst's host galaxy was so dense, less than 1 percent of the
afterglow's light was able to penetrate it. "Intrinsically,
this afterglow is the second brightest ever seen. That's the only
reason we were able to observe it at all," Prochaska
says.
Screening from thick molecular clouds provides a
natural explanation for so-called "dark bursts," which
lack associated afterglows. "We suspect that previous events
like GRB 080607 were just too faint to be observed," says
team member Yaron Sheffer of the University of Toledo, Ohio.
Nearly half of the absorption lines found in the Keck
spectrum are unidentified. The team expects that understanding
them will provide new data on the simplest space molecules.
A
paper describing the results will appear in a future issue of
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Most gamma-ray bursts
occur when massive stars run out of nuclear fuel. As the star’s
core collapses into a black hole or neutron star, gas jets punch
through the star and into space. Bright afterglows occur as the
jets heat gas that was previously shed by the star. Because a
massive star lives only a few tens of millions of years, it never
drifts far from its natal cloud.
Swift, launched in
November 2004, is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md. It was built and is being operated in
collaboration with Penn State, the Los Alamos National
Laboratory, and General Dynamics in the U.S.; the University of
Leicester and Mullard Space Sciences Laboratory in the United
Kingdom; Brera Observatory and the Italian Space Agency in Italy;
plus additional partners in Germany and Japan.
Source:
NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center / Francis Reddy
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