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October
20, 2008: For decades it was baffling. Out of the
still night sky, astronomers peering through their telescopes
would occasionally glimpse quick bursts of high-energy light
popping off like flashbulbs at the far side of the universe.
These
bursts seemed impossibly powerful: to appear so bright from
so very far away, they must vastly outshine entire galaxies
containing hundreds of billions of stars. These explosions,
called gamma ray bursts (GRBs), are by far the brightest and
most energetic phenomena in the known universe, second only
to the Big Bang itself. Scientists were at a loss to imagine
what could possibly cause them.
Right:
An artist's concept of a gamma-ray burst.
Astronomers
now know what the longer-lasting GRBs are: the collapse and
explosion of an ultra-massive star to form a black hole at
its core, an explanation first proposed by Stan Woosley of
the University of California in San Diego. But there’s a second
category of GRBs that still remains a mystery.
"The
short-lived ones are very poorly understood. It's where the
frontier [of research] is now," says Neil Gehrels, principal
investigator for the GRB-detecting Swift satellite at NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center.
Gehrels
and other researchers have gathered this week at the Sixth
Huntsville Gamma Ray Burst Symposium in Huntsville, Ala.,
to discuss progress on this and other mysteries surrounding
GRBs. Short gamma-ray bursts are a hot topic at today's sessions:
agenda.
"We
have had good evidence since the 1990s that the short bursts
and long bursts were different classes," Gehrels explains.
"It had to do with their gamma ray properties."
Not only do the short bursts last less than about 2 seconds,
the spectrum of light they emit is distinct. Gamma rays from
short bursts lean toward the high-energy end of the spectrum,
while long GRBs emit lower-energy gamma rays.
The
differences were highlighted in 2005 when, for the first time,
telescopes caught sight of short GRB afterglows. The fading
debris contained no supernova, arguing against the collapse
of a massive star. George Ricker of MIT, principal investigator
of NASA's HETE (High Energy and Transient Explorer) satellite,
famously likened a short burst on July 9, 2005, to "the
dog that didn't bark."
Ultimately,
the cause of short bursts is unknown. But scientists do have
some good guesses.

Above:
An artist's concept of a neutron star-neutron star collision.
The
leading theory is that these bursts are extremely violent
collisions between pairs of neutron stars. These stars aren't
gassy, wispy giants like other stars — a neutron star is more
like an atomic nucleus that's 12 kilometers across. Since
the atoms that make up normal, "solid" matter are
mostly empty space, a star made almost entirely of tightly
packed neutrons is extraordinarily dense: a fingernail's worth
of a neutron star would have a mass of more than a trillion
kilograms. A neutron star's density and gravity is second
only to a black hole. "When
you have these two hard stars that run into each other, it's
a very rapid fiery explosion. It's kind of like a crash."
So
how could scientists know whether this explanation is true?
One
way could be to detect gravitational waves. Before the two
neutron stars collide, they would orbit each other as a binary
system. Because their fields of gravity are so intense, the
stars ought to send waves rippling outward in the fabric of
space-time: gravitational waves. As the neutron stars spiral
in toward each other, the frequency of those waves would ramp
up in a characteristic pattern called a chirp signal.
"Scientists
are trying to [detect] that now," Gehrels says. "It's
the ultimate way of verifying the model."
Scientists at the Huntsville symposium are discussing the
progress of gravitational wave detectors such as the Laser
Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) located
in Hanford, Washington, and Livingston, Louisiana. By using
lasers to carefully measure the distances between pairs of
mirrors at these observatories, LIGO scientists can notice
tiny changes in these distances that would occur if subtle
gravitational waves were passing through the Earth.
Other
possible explanations for short GRBs exist as well, but only
hard data from experiments such as LIGO can settle what is
the real cause of these mysterious celestial bursts.
The
Sixth Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium 2008 is sponsored
by NASA's Fermi and Swift Projects and hosted by the Fermi
GBM Team based at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.
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Editor: Dr.
Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
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