Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

Most Extreme Gamma-Ray Blast Yet Detected

Posted by Soulskill on Sat Feb 21, 2009 02:07 AM
from the in-a-galaxy-far,-far-away dept.
Matt_dk sends in a quote from a story at NASA: "The first gamma-ray burst to be seen in high-resolution from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is one for the record books. The blast had the greatest total energy, the fastest motions and the highest-energy initial emissions ever seen. ... Gamma-ray bursts are the universe's most luminous explosions. Astronomers believe most occur when exotic massive stars run out of nuclear fuel. As a star's core collapses into a black hole, jets of material — powered by processes not yet fully understood — blast outward at nearly the speed of light. The jets bore all the way through the collapsing star and continue into space, where they interact with gas previously shed by the star and generate bright afterglows that fade with time. ...Fermi team members calculated that the blast exceeded the power of approximately 9,000 ordinary supernovae, if the energy was emitted equally in all directions."
+ -
story

Related Stories

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • And this isn't a Men in Black flashing device?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 21 2009, @02:09AM (#26939047)
    "Fermi team members calculated that the blast exceeded the power of approximately 9,000 ordinary supernovae, if the energy was emitted equally in all directions."

    IT'S OVER NINE THOUSAAAAAND~
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      best dbz call ever
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Kagura (843695)

      "Fermi team members calculated that the blast exceeded the power of approximately 9,000 ordinary supernovae, if the energy was emitted equally in all directions." IT'S OVER NINE THOUSAAAAAND~

      I was hoping for a great set of comments to read, but now I have to pick and choose to get to the informative comments--all because of this number. ;(

  • In an alternate galaxy long long ago...

    Emperor palpatine went senile, and every time they fired the death star superlaser, insisted that darth vader pull his finger.

    • Personally I wonder if somebody was fighting a hot war 12 billion years ago, and occasionally a weapon gets pointed in our direction.
      • It's a fun idea, but practically speaking, this is just far too powerful. A handful of supernovae worth of energy could fairly easily destroy an entire solar system, so a weapon yielding OVER 9000!!! (sorry) would be severe overkill. And not the fun sort of 'why not' overkill, but the inter-solar equivalent of nuking it from orbit: for when you have to be sure nothing within several hundred light-years survives (and another few thousand ltyr are devastated).

        So maybe it'd be more accurate to think of these

        • IIRC it was Arthur C Clarke who, with tounge firmly in cheek, suggested such blasts were in fact alien industrial accidents.
        • by ConanG (699649)

          The 9000 figure is assuming that the radiation is spread equally in every direction. A "stellar dog fight" weapon might not work that way. Think of a laser. Focus a lot of energy into a fairly tight beam. It would look a hell of a lot more powerful if someone assumed that same amount of energy was being spread in every direction.

  • by Snowblindeye (1085701) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:01AM (#26939245)

    My favorite comparison to illustrate the power of Gamma Ray Bursts: A Gamma Ray Burst puts out the same amount of power (while it is bursting) as all the stars in the universe together.

    (Usually comparisons made in the media are rather lame, i.e. Libraries of Congress, but this one really impressed me)

  • Bah, all that star talk mumbo-jumbo. We all know what really happened.

    A bunch of aliens just created the Hulk.

  • Kaboom (Score:5, Funny)

    by Dracophile (140936) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:23AM (#26939321)
    Great shot, kid! That was one in a million!
  • question (Score:3, Funny)

    by binaryseraph (955557) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:26AM (#26939331)
    Soooo should I put on the tin foil hat again?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by PPH (736903)
      Yes. And at these energy levels, make sure its shiny side out.
  • ..why is this not moderated over9000 (yet)? ;)

    Yah, yah, it's old, but hey. It fits :)

  • by toriver (11308) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:48AM (#26939395)

    "awesome!"

  • all i can think is

    <keanu reeves voice>whoa</keanu reeves voice>

  • by assemblerex (1275164) on Saturday February 21 2009, @05:43AM (#26939693)
    civilizations, if the odds of other life evolving to advanced civilizations is taken seriously.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by jschen (1249578)
        Furthermore, the early universe was much less rich in elements other than hydrogen and helium. Anything we might recognize as an advanced life form almost certainly would require a few generations of star formation to go by first before there's enough heavier elements given off by all the supernovas out there (admittedly, a lot more back then) to give them a chance. That said, it's not out of the question that something evolved that quickly. Sure, it wasn't so fast on earth, but one data point hardly makes
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by robbiedo (553308)
      There are an awful lot of assumptions made in astronomical measurements. Numbers that are bandied about have huge margins for error based on a series of interdependent assumptions. Not only is this estimated to be 12 billion light years distant; obviously, this event occurred in the distant past near the beginning of the Universe itself.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      One of the articles I read about this event talks about a technique which relies on the way light between the source and us is absorbed by dust along the path which the light traverses. Low energy photons are absorbed at a different rate to high energy photons. Measuring the spectrum at our end can tell you how much dust is between us and the light source. This gives astronomers an estimate of distance.
    • GROND (Score:3, Informative)

      In this particular case, it was this [eso.org].

      Method is explained a little in the eso.org link, but here's a wikipedia article, too: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photometric_redshift [wikipedia.org].

      Also, awesome Tolkien reference apparently acknowledged by Jochen Greiner.

    • Re:how do they know (Score:5, Informative)

      by DamienRBlack (1165691) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:57AM (#26939433)

      i've always wondered how they know the size and distance of these objects. short of running a tape measure out, how the hell do you calculate the size of something an unknown distance away?

      The chain of logic is vast and complex, but I'll try to summarize:

      1) First, we used radar and the speed of light to figure out the distances of things in our solar system. These calculations helped us figure out the diameter of the Earth's orbit, which is used in the next step, parallax.

      2) Once we know the diameter of Earth's orbit, we used parallax to determine the distance to nearby stars. Parallax is a process of triangulation, where we use the earth at two extremes and the star we are looking at as the three points of a triangle. Knowing two angles and one side lets us solve for the distance to the star. But the resolution of our telescopes only lets us use this method with any accuracy for stars in our immediate vicinity.

      3) Once we could figure our how far away nearby stars are, we began focusing in on types of stars that have fairly consistent outputs of energy in comparison to their other measurable traits, such as color. We call these consistent types of stars (and other astronomical objects) standard candles.

      4) Once we are sure that these standard candles do indeed have consistently predictable outputs, we can guess how far away stars of these types are by noting that luminosity (total light output) and apparent brightness are related by a simple inverse distance squared relationship. This lets us estimate the distance to any type of star that has a fairly estimable luminosity.

      5) After we have our standard candles mapped out in space, we can note the absorption lines in the light spectrum which indicates various types of dust and gasses. With this data we can make a rough map of where dust and gasses are floating around. This map will let us look at light from stars and objects that aren't standard candles and figure out how far away they should be to account for the absorption lines we see in their light spectrum.

      6) After mapping out many of the nearby galaxies using supernovae as our key standard candle, we notices that is seems that there is a linear correlation between how far away an object is and how fast it is moving away from us (we can tell how fast an object is moving away from us using red-shift). This observation seems to show that the universe is expanding, but more important to the discussion at hand, it gives us another tool with which to estimate and map the distances of objects -- this time at any arbitrary distance.

      Using the many of the above methods we can get estimates for how far away objects are, but the margin of error is huge because of all of the assumptions we've made. Plus of minus a magnitude or two is considered fairly precise in astronomical terms. This might have been more of an answer than you bargained for, but there you have it.

      • by ergean (582285) on Saturday February 21 2009, @05:05AM (#26939599) Journal
        This is why I come to /. once in a thousand comments there is one like this. Thank you!
      • Re:how do they know (Score:5, Informative)

        by ConanG (699649) on Saturday February 21 2009, @05:11AM (#26939605)

        I don't think you made the part about standard candles very clear, so I'll elaborate on that point.

        The term doesn't refer to a specific type of star. Standard candles are any stellar objects that have some quality that allows them to be used to measure distance.

        One of the most famous examples are Cepheid variable stars. These stars all vary in brightness over some predictable period of time. There is a relationship between how fast they "pulse" and how bright they are. The faster they pulse, the dimmer they are (in absolute terms). If one is pulsing really slow, and it looks dim (relatively speaking), it's probably very far away since it should be relatively bright. If it looks bright and pulses quickly, it's probably close by since they don't get very bright (absolutely speaking).

        Other standard candles include planetary nebula, supergiants, globular clusters, H II regions, and supernova. Each of them has a different maximum range over which they can be detected, but there is some overlap. The ones in the overlapping regions are used to calibrate the distances for the rest.

      • yep, thank you! ...and I wonder why this story is tagged !etacarinae

      • by tjstork (137384) <tbandrowsky@might y w a re.com> on Saturday February 21 2009, @09:53AM (#26940705) Homepage Journal

        That's enormously interesting.

        It seems to me that, if funding were available, one of the most useful things for astronomy then would be a set of ships sent to "opposite" orbits in the solar system, extremely far from the sun. Given today's technology, the farther you could get a pair of ships orbiting at an extreme distance from the sun - out past jupiter and farther, then, you could extend the range of your parallax measurements, which are fairly direct. You'll never obviously be able to get the whole universe, but you would be able to get more standard candles. Or, are there already enough stars within a thousand light years that you don't need that? A thousand light years is a pretty good chunk of space.

      • by andersa (687550) on Saturday February 21 2009, @11:48AM (#26941487)

        2) Once we know the diameter of Earth's orbit, we used parallax to determine the distance to nearby stars. Parallax is a process of triangulation, where we use the earth at two extremes and the star we are looking at as the three points of a triangle. Knowing two angles and one side lets us solve for the distance to the star. But the resolution of our telescopes only lets us use this method with any accuracy for stars in our immediate vicinity.

        This is where the Gaia mission [esa.int] will step in and improve things drastically.

        Using distant quasars as fixed beacons, Gaia will collect paralax data to all of the brightest starts in our galaxy and for a huge number of closer stars. With this data we will be able to produce a precise 3d map of our entire galaxy. We will finally be able to see it as a distant observer will see it. It will revolutionise our knowledge of space. I personally think this is the coolest astrophysics project being developed right now.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Parallax and redshift perhaps?

        Parallax only works to about 1600 light years, which is aprox 1% of the diameter of our Galaxy. And that is with a specialized satellite doing the measurement. There is no way parallax is going to work for something that is 12.2 billion light-years away.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        parallax only works for stars very close (astronomically speaking) to us... few dozen light-years at most. Even then they have to use the whole width of earth's orbit around the sun, taken 6 months apart, to calculate the parallax.... closing your left eye then your right eye aint gonna cut it for measuring light-year distances :P

        Redshift is how they measure galaxy distances, and by some process they determine that this gamma ray burst occurred in galaxy X, so that's how far they come up with the distance h

        • Re:how do they know (Score:4, Informative)

          by daemonburrito (1026186) on Saturday February 21 2009, @05:10AM (#26939603) Journal

          The host or counterpart galaxy was too faint (the GRB was 12.8Gly away, and models predict that the host galaxy wouldn't be detectable). But apparently, there is now enough confidence in the models for GRBs to get a good fix on the distance anyway. It's awesome that they can do this without observing a host galaxy now.

          The same team that measured this also confirmed the most distant GRB to date last September, and this is within the most distant 5% of observed GRBs.

          Arxiv paper [arxiv.org]

        • The spectrum shape and afterglow over time are predicted by models. Here's one cited by the J. Grenier et al. paper on arxiv: http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/518996 [uchicago.edu].

          Here's the J. Grenier (the GROND leader) paper on arxiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/0902.0761 [arxiv.org]

            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              So is the weather, and the stock market.

              Bad analogy. We're using these models to do something more along the lines of looking at all that standing water in somebody's backyard about three states away and saying, ah yes, it rained there last night. In other words, they're looking at something that's already happened and attempting to figure out what has already happened. I think we can do this at least reasonably well for both the weather and (to a lesser extent, I suspect) the stock market.

    • by MichaelSmith (789609) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:07AM (#26939271) Homepage Journal
      What I wanted to see was a graph with time on the horizontal axis and energy on the vertical axis. That would give me a better feel of what the burst actually did.
      • I'm assuming you'd like the logarithmic scaled version! :)
        I'd go one further. That very same graph with a third axis (axee? axen? Arg!) that shows this burst/time graph relative to an energy source I can somewhat comprehend. Maybe the projected output of an average star over that same time frame.

        P.S. - Great sig. I actually LOL'ed.
        • by yotto (590067) on Saturday February 21 2009, @03:50AM (#26939407) Homepage

          That very same graph with a third axis (axee? axen? Arg!) that shows this burst/time graph relative to an energy source I can somewhat comprehend.

          The plural of axis is axes.

          That said, you're talking about a single one (the third in a set, but it's still singular) so axis is correct.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          P.S. - Great sig. I actually LOL'ed.

          Its not mine though. Years ago there was a magazine called Kilobaud Microcomputing. In one issue they ran a funny graphic story called "The man from CPU". It was a detective story built around computer jargon. By the time I realised the value of it my Dad had cleared out the attic and all the old magazines were gone. From time to time I google a few choice keywords in the hope that somebody has put their archives on line and I can recover the article.

          So far it has been no go but I put that line in my sig

      • http://arxiv.org/abs/0902.0761 [arxiv.org]

        Submitted by the leader of the team working with GROND.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by boot_img (610085)

        "9,000 ordinary supernovae" = 9000 x 10^44 Joules =~ 10^48 Joules.

        According to Wikipedia, 1 ton (do they mean tonne) of TNT = 4 x 10^9 Joules, so this makes 2 x 10^38 tons of TNT equivalent.

        And the largest bomb ever exploded is 5x10^8 tons of TNT.

        So this would be ~ 10^30 of those, or around a million Yotta-bombs.

        Not sure if that helps.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by hwyhobo (1420503)

      gif animation

      Actually, it is worse. It is a 6-second .mov Quicktime movie, all 7 MB of it. Considering it is a 6-second movie of colored dots, it would have been a lot more efficient to represent it in a different format. Perhaps an animated GIF?

      • Your tax dollars at work eh? Paying for NASAs servers to withstand a Slashdotting of an excessively large movie.

    • by Xiroth (917768)

      But Gamma Ray bursts are a mystery. Actually 3 mysteries, because they been classed into three types the fastest a 1000 times faster than the slower type.

      Uh, what? Last I checked, there's only one speed that gamma rays can go in a given medium - the speed of light. Are you perhaps referring to frequency differences?

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Bazman (4849)

        The "speed" is how long the burst lasts for - not how fast the gamma rays go!

    • Not even close. The universe extends so far in every direction that no matter where you look, you get objects receding from you at the speed of light.

      On the upside though, congratulations! You are once again at the center of the known universe.

    • Re:Big Bang (Score:4, Informative)

      by boot_img (610085) on Saturday February 21 2009, @06:43AM (#26939903)

      No, this was just a little Bang. The big one, we had already found. You can see a picture here [nasa.gov].

    • It's called "EIRP" (Score:3, Informative)

      by mangu (126918)

      A common acronym you'll find in engineering and physics texts is EIRP, which stands for equivalent isotropic radiated power. This means you take the direction with the highest intensity of radiation and calculate what would be the total power if it was radiated with equal intensity in all directions.

      This system of calculation is very convenient in communications engineering, because you buy amplifiers and antennas separately. Antennas which emit tighter beams are called "high gain", because using one such a