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Contact: Donald
Savage Bill
Steigerwald Robert
Sanders
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May 28, 2003
- RELEASE:
03-180 RHESSI'S LUCKY BREAK MAY LEAD TO SECRET OF ULTIMATE EXPLOSIONS A chance observation by a NASA satellite, designed to study the sun, may have uncovered one of the most important clues yet obtained about the mechanism for producing gamma ray bursts, the most powerful explosions in the universe. The
Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) satellite
was snapping pictures of solar flares on December 6, 2002. Unexpectedly,
RHESSI caught an extremely Solar
flares are tremendous explosions, in the atmosphere of the sun, powered
by the sudden release of magnetic energy. Gamma ray bursts are remote
flashes of gamma ray light that Two University of California, Berkeley (UCB), researchers, Dr. Steven Boggs, assistant professor of physics, and Dr. Wayne Coburn, a postdoctoral fellow at the UCB Space Sciences Laboratory, are presenting their findings today during a press conference at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Nashville, Tenn. Their paper about this discovery was published in the May 22 issue of Nature. "RHESSI
was sent into space to uncover the secrets of solar flares, the largest
explosions in our Solar System, so I am delighted that it has been able
to serendipitously provide new information about gamma ray bursts, the
largest explosions in the whole universe," said Dr. Brian Dennis,
The
strong polarization measured by RHESSI provides a unique window on how
these bursts are powered, according to Boggs. He interprets the measurements
to mean the burst originates The
gamma rays measured by RHESSI were about 80 percent polarized, consistent
with the maximum possible polarization from electrons spiraling around
magnetic field lines. The Though the electrons are probably accelerated to nearly the speed of light in shock waves, the fact the gamma rays are maximally polarized implies the shock waves themselves are driven by an underlying strong magnetic field. "The
amount of polarization they found is so intense, that it looks like it's
pure synchrotron radiation and nothing else. All the other theories are
going to have to bite the dust now," said Dr. Kevin Hurley, a UCB
gamma ray burst physicist. Since 1990, Hurley has operated the Third Interplanetary
Network (IPN3) of six satellites linked together to pinpoint gamma ray
bursts and immediately alert astronomers. However, for such a novel measurement,
further independent The discovery of polarization reveals how a gamma ray burst is powered, through the generation of a strong, large-scale magnetic field. The next question is: Why do some supernovae lead to a strong, organized magnetic field? This might be a question we can only address through theory, but the pieces of evidence are in place for theorists to unravel, Boggs concluded. For more information about the research on the Internet, visit: http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/2003/0528rhessigrb.html - end
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