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Dark
Gamma-Ray Bursts More Flighty Than Shy
Astronomers
have solved the mystery of why nearly two-thirds of all gamma-ray
bursts, the most powerful explosions in the Universe, seem to leave
no trace or afterglow: In some cases, they just weren't looking
fast enough.
New analysis
from NASA's speedy High Energy Transient Explorer (HETE), which
locates bursts and directs other satellites and telescopes to the
explosion within minutes (and sometimes seconds), reveals that most
gamma-ray bursts likely have some afterglow after all.
Scientists announce
these results today at a press conference at the 2003 Gamma Ray
Burst Conference in Santa Fe, N.M., a culmination of a year's worth
of HETE data.
"For years,
we thought of dark gamma-ray bursts as being more unsociable than
the Cheshire Cat, not having the courtesy to leave a visible smile
behind when they faded away," said HETE Principal Investigator
George Ricker of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge,
Mass.
"Now we
are finally seeing that smile. Bit by bit, burst by burst, the gamma-ray
mystery is unfolding. This new HETE result implies that we now have
a way to study most gamma-ray bursts, not just a meager one third."
For the complete
article on the study of gamma-ray bursts, go to: http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/news-release/releases/2003/03-88.htm
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