New window on the high-energy universe
New telescope finds that the high-energy share of gamma-ray bursts arrive at Earth significantly later than the low-energy portion
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RECORD BURSTThe X-ray afterglow of the record-breaking gamma-ray burst GRB 080916C appears orange and yellow in this composite image from two telescopes on NASA's Swift satellite. Researchers reported February 19 that the burst is the most energetic known.IMAGE CREDIT: Stefan Immer, Swift/NASA

Editor’s note: This story was updated February 19 after Michael Briggs of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt., Md., reported that the gamma-ray burst known as GRB 080916C is the most energetic burst known.

VANCOUVER, Canada — Curtain up! Light the lights! In its first four months of monitoring the heavens from orbit, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has unveiled the activity of celestial objects that emit powerful gamma rays — photons that pack 20 million to more than 300 billion times the energy of visible light. The orbiting observatory features the first detectors in space capable of recording the most energetic of these photons.

For now, Fermi’s flurry of first findings — which include new discoveries about gamma-ray bursts as well as the energetic radiation emitted by rapidly spinning stellar corpses called pulsars, several never before recorded — poses new puzzles. But ultimately the discoveries will offer new insight into the origin of these powerful emissions and the activity of some of the most enigmatic objects in the cosmos, says Peter Michelson of Stanford University, principal investigator of Fermi’s Large Area Telescope, the device on the observatory that records the high-energy emissions.

Michelson and his Stanford colleague Aurelien Bouvier presented some of the discoveries on December 8 in Vancouver at the Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics. Other reports will follow later this week at the conference.

Some of the new findings focus on gamma-ray bursts, the ephemeral flashes of light that signal the most powerful explosions in the universe since the Big Bang. Long-duration bursts — those lasting more than about a second or two — may be the birth cries of black holes, as jets of material zoom out of collapsing stars. Short bursts may signal the final coalescence of two elderly neutron stars or black holes.

In his talk, Bouvier announced that the Large Area Telescope had for the first time captured high-energy emissions from three gamma-ray bursts. In each case, the telescope did not record any energetic radiation until well after Fermi’s other instrument, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor, had recorded the low-energy components of the same bursts.

The time delay between the onset of high- and low-energy emissions — which amounted to five seconds in a burst discovered on September 16 and dubbed GRB 080916C — suggests that the high-energy gamma rays from bursts might be produced at a different place or by different particles than the lower-energy radiation, says Bouvier.

It may be easier — and quicker — for electrons, which are relatively lightweight, to rev up to high speeds and crash into each other, producing the early, lower-energy part of these bursts, says Bouvier. It’s possible that protons, which are heavier and therefore take longer to accelerate, contribute to the higher-energy component some time later.    

And there could be another, more intriguing — and much more speculative — explanation for at least part of the delay, Bouvier adds. The highest energy photons — 13 gigaelectron volts — from the September 16 event arrived 16.5 seconds later than the lowest energy emissions. Spectra of the visible-light afterglow of the burst reveal an origin in a remote galaxy 12.2 billion light-years from Earth.

Many theories of quantum gravity predict that spacetime on its tiniest scale isn’t continuous but is as malleable and variable as sea foam. Because of this foaminess, not all photons would travel at the same speed. Those with higher gravitational potential — higher energies, according to Einstein’s E=mc2 — would travel slightly slower through space and arrive slightly later than lower-energy photons. The effect would be tiny, but over a journey of 12.2 billion light-years, it might be detectable.

The September 16 event is also notable for other reasons, says Michael Briggs of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt., Md. As recorded near Earth, the burst lasted for 23 minutes, 700 times longer than the average long-duration burst. Even after accounting for the stretching effect of cosmic expansion, that means the burst endured for 4 minutes when it was created 12.2 billion years ago.

It’s also the most powerful burst ever recorded, according to calculations. Its energy was probably concentrated in a focused beam, but if the radiation had spread out equally in all directions from the burst —the standard assumption astronomers use when estimating the energy of a burst — it converted the equivalent of 4.9 solar masses into gamma rays, Briggs and his colleagues report February 19 online in Science.

Also intriguing is that, unlike most bursts which start out more energetic and then cool down, the low-energy components of this burst began first but lasted for only 3 minutes. The high-energy component, after the delay, endured for 20 minutes.

Two of the three bursts detected by the Large Area Telescope — the September 16 event as well as a burst recorded on August 25 — belong to a class of bursts that last for more than a second. But on October 24, the telescope for the first time recorded extremely high-energy emissions from a short gamma-ray burst, one that lasted for only a few tenths of a second.

The Fermi data “support the picture that while the progenitors of long and short bursts are different … the sources of the outflow in both cases share many similarities and are probably sharing the same physical mechanism,” comments Ehud Nakar of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

Also at the conference, Michelson reported that the Large Area Telescope has now recorded 15 previously unknown pulsars in our galaxy. These 15 rapidly rotating neutron stars, the dense cinders left behind when massive stars explode, have been found to emit only gamma rays, not pulses of radio waves as most of the 1,800 known pulsars do. If Fermi continues to find gamma-ray–only pulsars at such a high rate, astronomers would have the data to infer that the universe hosts as many gamma-ray pulsars as radio pulsars.


Found in: Atom & Cosmos
Comments 14
  • It is not so easy to try stop big chip what small boat, you know! Expanding sun emit small boat who emit some expanding energy and that enrgy try to stop particle who coming from here!

    New and right www.onesimpleprinciple.com model of an atom it is



    The atomcores expand three-dimentionally, opening up energywaves that have the nature of electron and photon.
    Mr. Pressure Mr. Pressure
    Dec. 14, 2008 at 3:37pm
  • Yes. It is also not so easy to try get more speed with big chip what small boat, you know! You need more energy to go faster and faster, if you have e big chip!

    Small energy particle expanding and emit energy and with that energy they bush them selfs faster and faster to here.

    Now small boat leads and they emit energy all the way and that energy it is not good for high energy particle who also expanding and emit energy!
    Mr. Pressure Mr. Pressure
    Dec. 16, 2008 at 2:29am
  • In a area between the expanding atomcores of the stars the photons push themselves away from the centre of a star faster than the atomcores. Relatively the expanding atomcores don´t draw away from the expanding centre of a star.

    The photons that expand and open up (emit)energywaves make the photons in front of them explode all the time more than their energy according to their orbit of movement backwards.

    The energy of the photons speed up at the same relation as they expand. The movement towards the less thick area that does not expand or bend.

    This explains the common red transition of light. The common transition of light is a provement to a thing that photons do explode and emit (open up) energywaves at the same time.

    So, space does not expand or bend.

    If you like to know more, lets check out (Etimespace) youtube video. Etimespace have a some video! Idea of expanding atoms! There is no gravity at all! Bending light with out curving space!
    Mr. Pressure Mr. Pressure
    Dec. 17, 2008 at 3:49am
  • That the site permits the posting of such charmingly incomprehensible comments as those of Mr. Pressure speaks well for Science News' commitment to freedom of speech. I would venture, however, that the oft used comment: "It's not even wrong." applies to these comments.
    Jack Lass Jack Lass
    Dec. 24, 2008 at 5:04pm
  • I love space exploration. More and more things found everyday. Isn't it great?
    - James @ http://www.4insure.net
    james shaffer james shaffer
    Sep. 18, 2009 at 10:10pm
  • Modern science amazes me everyday. I'm still waiting for faster than light travel though =p.

    John @ http://mmohut.com
    Gamre Mack Gamre Mack Gamre Mack Gamre Mack
    Oct. 22, 2009 at 6:02pm
  • We know so little still around the way in which light and in some cases, sound travels to Earth. If you stop and consider how prehistoric it is that we look to measure light using the concept of time and how long it takes to reach us...obstacles in lights path will effect the time taken for these elements to reaach us giving us some indication of what is actually out there. Seems rather unadvanced way though doesn't it...Preston @ http://www.ukarea51.com
    Preston Lardy Preston Lardy
    Oct. 24, 2009 at 3:53pm
  • this is so amazing to think about. science is great to see.
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    james lee james lee
    Nov. 7, 2009 at 1:19pm
  • Wow that's a great find. But i think this news is pretty old one. After this, two more tests were carried out and much stronger burst was recorded in June.
    http://ultrareview.net
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    Tom Schavo Tom Schavo
    Nov. 8, 2009 at 12:54am
  • this is so amazing to think about. science is great to see. Thank you for sharing. EJC @ http://www.exportjapanesecar.com
    EJC Izawa EJC Izawa
    Nov. 9, 2009 at 4:51am
  • Great Post Thank for share!
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    Finance Execter Finance Execter
    Nov. 10, 2009 at 1:38am
  • Wow amazing, space is so unpredictable
    thanks for the share
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    daniels daniels
    Nov. 16, 2009 at 7:46am
  • wow this is interesting news. thanks for sharing!

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    paul lingen paul lingen
    Nov. 17, 2009 at 11:57am
  • gamma-ray bursts GRB 080916C orange and yellow is so amazing. I wish I could work at NASA. Satellite developments at NASA is very good. I'd love to have an image of money produced by NASA. for gamma explosion happened, what happened is very dangerous effects?

    http://www.der-software-blog.net
    Bernd Riz Bernd Riz
    Nov. 20, 2009 at 7:52am
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