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Contact: Nancy
Neal Bill
Steigerwald Denise
Brehm
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December 23, 2002
- RELEASE:
02-257
SCIENTISTS CATCH THEIR FIRST ELUSIVE "DARK" GAMMA-RAY BURST For the first time, scientists -- racing the clock -- have snapped a photo of an unusual type of gamma-ray-burst event one minute after the explosion. They captured a particularly fast-fading type of "dark" burst, which comprises about half of all gamma-ray bursts. A gamma-ray
burst announces the birth of a new black hole. It is the most powerful
type of explosion known, second only to the Big Bang in total energy release.
This latest finding may These "dark" bursts are so named because they have had no detectable optical afterglow until now. Other bursts have afterglows that linger for days or weeks, likely caused by the explosion's shock waves ramming into and heating gas in the interstellar medium. "Perhaps
none of these bursts is truly 'dark,' provided we can catch the burst
fast enough," said Dr. George Ricker of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge. The
orbiting HETE, which alerts scientists to gamma-ray bursts, spotted one
December 11, originating six billion light-years away, and relayed its
location to observatories worldwide in 22 seconds. The ground-based RAPTOR
(RAPid Telescopes for Optical Response) optical telescope, operated by
the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, was the The afterglow was gone in two hours and would have been missed and labeled "dark" if not for HETE's rapid turnaround. Also, as chance would have it, this burst falls into a subcategory of rare "transitional" bursts, between the short-and long-duration variety, lasting only 2.5 seconds. Thus, scientists have their most detailed look yet at the rarest of gamma-ray bursts. Gamma-ray
bursts are common, yet random, and fleeting events that have mystified
astronomers since their discovery in the late 1960s. Many scientists say
longer bursts (over four Some theorists have suggested "dark" bursts have no detectable afterglow because they are buried in thick dust and gas, which blocks the afterglow's light from reaching us. Yet the new observation of the December 11 burst implies the opposite. Ricker said the burst may have occurred in a region with hardly any surrounding gas and dust; thus the shock waves had little material to smash into to create a prolonged afterglow. In this case, the rapidly fading afterglow may support the binary-merger theory of short bursts. Binary systems with a combination of neutron stars or black holes are old, and in the billions of years they take to form often work their ways outward to less dense regions of a host galaxy. Thus, when they merge, there is no material to make a long afterglow. After
HETE's initial alert, Drs. Paul Price and Derek Fox of the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., were the first to report
on the burst location using the 48-inch Oschin Schmidt telescope at the
Palomar Observatory in California about 20 minutes after the burst. Reports
are Later came reports of three earlier observations, with RAPTOR, the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (University of California, Berkeley) and SuperLotis at Kitt Peak, operated by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif. Unraveling
the gamma-ray burst mystery will require more burst observations. HETE
is pioneering a larger mission called Swift, which NASA plans to launch
in December 2003 to HETE was built by MIT as a mission of opportunity under the NASA Explorer Program. HETE is a collaboration of U.S. universities, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and scientists and organizations in Brazil, France, India, Italy and Japan. For
images and more information refer to: -end- |
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