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NASA
Satellite Detects Naked-Eye Explosion Halfway Across Universe
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Hi-Res
Version
The
extremely luminous afterglow of GRB 080319B was imaged by
Swift's X-ray Telescope (left) and Optical/Ultraviolet
Telescope (right). This was by far the brightest gamma-ray
burst afterglow ever seen.
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Credit:
NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler, et al.
A powerful stellar
explosion detected March 19 by NASA's Swift satellite has
shattered the record for the most distant object that could be
seen with the naked eye.
The explosion was a gamma ray
burst. Most gamma ray bursts occur when massive stars run out of
nuclear fuel. Their cores collapse to form black holes or neutron
stars, releasing an intense burst of high-energy gamma rays and
ejecting particle jets that rip through space at nearly the speed
of light like turbocharged cosmic blowtorches. When the jets plow
into surrounding interstellar clouds, they heat the gas, often
generating bright afterglows. Gamma ray bursts are the most
luminous explosions in the universe since the big bang.
"This
burst was a whopper," said Swift principal investigator Neil
Gehrels of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
"It blows away every gamma ray burst we've seen so
far."
Swift's Burst Alert Telescope picked up the
burst at 2:12 a.m. EDT, March 19, and pinpointed the coordinates
in the constellation Boötes. Telescopes in space and on the
ground quickly moved to observe the afterglow. The burst is named
GRB 080319B, because it was the second gamma ray burst detected
that day.
Swift's other two instruments, the X-ray
Telescope and the Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope, also observed
brilliant afterglows. Several ground-based telescopes saw the
afterglow brighten to visual magnitudes between 5 and 6 in the
logarithmic magnitude scale used by astronomers. The brighter an
object is, the lower its magnitude number. From a dark location
in the countryside, people with normal vision can see stars
slightly fainter than magnitude 6. That means the afterglow would
have been dim, but visible to the naked eye.
Later that
evening, the Very Large Telescope in Chile and the Hobby-Eberly
Telescope in Texas measured the burst's redshift at 0.94. A
redshift is a measure of the distance to an object. A redshift of
0.94 translates into a distance of 7.5 billion light years,
meaning the explosion took place 7.5 billion years ago, a time
when the universe was less than half its current age and Earth
had yet to form. This is more than halfway across the visible
universe.
"No other known object or type of explosion
could be seen by the naked eye at such an immense distance,"
said Swift science team member Stephen Holland of Goddard. "If
someone just happened to be looking at the right place at the
right time, they saw the most distant object ever seen by human
eyes without optical aid."
GRB 080319B's optical
afterglow was 2.5 million times more luminous than the most
luminous supernova ever recorded, making it the most
intrinsically bright object ever observed by humans in the
universe. The most distant previous object that could have been
seen by the naked eye is the nearby galaxy M33, a relatively
short 2.9 million light-years from Earth.
Analysis of GRB
080319B is just getting underway, so astronomers don't know why
this burst and its afterglow were so bright. One possibility is
the burst was more energetic than others, perhaps because of the
mass, spin, or magnetic field of the progenitor star or its jet.
Or perhaps it concentrated its energy in a narrow jet that was
aimed directly at Earth.
GRB 080319B was one of four
bursts that Swift detected, a Swift record for one day.
"Coincidentally, the passing of Arthur C. Clarke seems to
have set the universe ablaze with gamma ray bursts," said
Swift science team member Judith Racusin of Penn State University
in University Park, Pa.
Swift is managed by Goddard. 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 partners in Germany and
Japan.
Source:
NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center

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