'Starquake' Cracks Star 84
geekroot's dad writes "Space.com is reporting that a huge 'starquake' releasing as much energy as our sun does in 250,000 years, has cracked a nearby neutron star. The magnetar produced the brightest explosion ever seen by man outside of the milky way. Although it is 50,000 light-years away, the blast was so huge it temporarily blinded some satellites and briefly altered Earth's upper atmosphere!"
gamma ray bursts (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:2)
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:3, Informative)
The original topic. magnetars. are actually in between. They radiate pulses of lower energy gamma rays that repeat irregularly. We think they are highly
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:5, Funny)
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:1)
I think they meant to post this link [space.com] instead.
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:5, Informative)
They are still being studied, and their causes are still somewhat ambiguous, but black holes are almost certainly involved. One theory, if I recall correctly is big bright short-lived stars in the early universse reaching the end of their life. The core of the star then collapses very suddenly, forming a black hole (in a regular supernova you get a neutron star) and the outer part of the star follows it in, and get heated and churned by the implosion, and then explodes out. Another theory is that a GRB represents the last moments a a neutron star falling into a black hole, or two neutron stars colliding to form a black hole.
These magnetar related events are much less energetic, but loads nearer.
Re:gamma ray bursts (Score:2)
Or a star destroyer saying bye-bye to some planets.
Starquake (Score:1, Funny)
Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:5, Insightful)
What's significantly impressive is that this explosion is strong enough to kick nearly multiple times as hard as the average of what the galaxy usually does to us.
(I'm not quite sure on this figure - the power of the wind from our sun should decrease as r^3, ditto the power from the starquake; if r goes down to 1/94, r^3 is reaching for a million?! This would imply the quake is nearly a million times as strong as the average wind from the galaxy; granted there's likely to be drastic fluid dynamics contortions and things that effectively cut that number down to something more 'sane' (depending on how sane you think it is to try to calculate stellar force magnitudes...), but you still have a figure significantly bigger than the entire galaxy!)
And then you get to the quote line from the article "We have observed an object only 20 kilometers across [12 miles], on the other side of our galaxy, releasing more energy in a tenth of a second than the Sun emits in 100,000 years."
combine that with the distance from us (50000 light years = 6 trillion miles = 10 trillion km) and the bit where it says it rotates on its axis every 7.5 seconds and has the strongest magnetic field in the known universe... wow.
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:4, Informative)
Of the known magnetars, four are called soft gamma repeaters, or SGRs, because they flare up randomly and release gamma rays. The flare on SGR 1806-20 unleashed about 10,000 trillion trillion trillion watts of power.
10 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 watts of power. No wonder my brain gave up trying to work out the numbers.
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:2, Funny)
ultramega xtreme magnetar shearing?
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:1, Funny)
It's the Libyans! Run for it, Marty! (Score:1, Funny)
Great Scott!!
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:2, Insightful)
"God created the integers, all the rest is the work of man." -- Leopold Kronecker
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:2)
One electron weights about 9E-28 grams. So the univese weights about 3E82 electrons.
So this blast was 1/3E27th of the universe matter
Re:Starquake? A trillion is... .. to zillion! (Score:2)
a billion is 1000^3 or 10^9,
a trillion is 1000^4 or 10^12,
a quadrillion is 1000^5 or 10^15
a quintillion is 1000^6 or 10^18
a sextillion is 1000^7 or 10^21
a septillion is 1000^8 or 10^24
a octillion is 1000^9 or 10^27
a nonillion is 1000^11 or 10^30
a decillion is 1000^12 or 10^33
a undecillion is 1000^13 or 10^36
a duodecillion is 1000^14 or 10^39
a tredecillion is 1000^15 or 10^40
a quattuordecillion is 1000^16 or 10^42
a quindecillion is 1000^17 or 10^45
a sexdecillion is 1000^18 or 10^4
Re:Starquake? A trillion is... .. to zillion! (Score:2)
I don't think even the number of atoms in the universe equals a googolplex. Last time I did some wildly inaccurate napkin calculations, I was still about ten orders of magnitude short.
- David Stein
Re:Starquake? A trillion is... .. to zillion! (Score:1)
Re:Starquake? A trillion is... .. to zillion! (Score:1)
trillion ... zillion (Score:4, Informative)
a billion is 1000^3 or 10^9,
a trillion is 1000^4 or 10^12,
a quadrillion is 1000^5 or 10^15
a quintillion is 1000^6 or 10^18
a sextillion is 1000^7 or 10^21
a septillion is 1000^8 or 10^24
a octillion is 1000^9 or 10^27
a nonillion is 1000^11 or 10^30
a decillion is 1000^12 or 10^33
a undecillion is 1000^13 or 10^36
a duodecillion is 1000^14 or 10^39
a tredecillion is 1000^15 or 10^40
a quattuordecillion is 1000^16 or 10^42
a quindecillion is 1000^17 or 10^45
a sexdecillion is 1000^18 or 10^48
a septendecillion is 1000^19 or 10^51
a octodecillion is 1000^20 or 10^54
a novemdecillion is 1000^21 or 10^57
a vigintillion is 1000^22 or 10^60
a zillion is 10^playground
a googol is 10^100
a googolplex is 10^googol (if you wrote this down in its expanded form, the paper would not fit into the volume of the solar system)
So the wattage output of the SGR 1806-20 flare is just a piddly 1.0 tredecillion watts - or, you you adopt Jim Blower's Extended System of Units, that would be 10 tredawatts
Re:trillion ... zillion (Score:4, Funny)
What if you got one of those Japanese rice-writers to do the writing on paper? I mean, we're talking about a font size like 0.01 points. We should get someone on that.
Takahiro the rice writer... (Score:2)
Re:Takahiro the rice writer... (Score:1)
Re:trillion ... zillion (Score:1)
In fact, you (probably) couldn't write a googolplex in straight decimal at all, even if you used subatomic particles for zeros, as current estimates suggest there are only about 10^70 particles in the universe.
Re:trillion ... zillion (Score:1)
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:1)
Oh man, I sense an FCC fine coming on! How do ya like that, magnetar!
r^3 (Score:3, Informative)
I agree that in general it's not that simple: gravity pulls the wind back, so that it falls off faster than that, but with a "quake" like this, gravity's going to have a hard job.
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:1)
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:1)
Which reminds me of a idea I had when first hearing about these events as it relates to the SETI project.
If one were to map out a significant amout of these objects and a general approx of there historic path through the galaxy, one could rule out entire regions of galaxy where if life did begin would have been destroyed. The regions far enough away from these objects th
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:2)
This has "Alcubierre Drive" [wikipedia.org] written all over it.
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Starquake? We need a more... extreme name (Score:3, Funny)
So . . . how far is that in AU?
Over simplified science? (Score:1)
The magnetic field around one [magnetar] is about 1,000 trillion gauss, strong enough to strip information from a credit card at a distance halfway to the Moon
I admit that 1,000 trillion gauss is not an easy number to grasp but why would someone want to present it like this? It's not as if everybody knows the strength of a magnetic field required to wipe a credit card at a distance of 1 meter....
Re:Over simplified science? (Score:1)
Re:Over simplified science? (Score:1)
Re:Over simplified science? (Score:2)
Now *that*'s an image that means something!
--LWM
Re:Over simplified science? (Score:2)
Cracks me up (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Cracks me up (Score:5, Interesting)
Subject: Cracks me up [slashdot.org] (31 August 2005)
"Of course they're baffled. They won't let anybody competent explain it to them. These guys never studied plasma fluid dynamics in school, and they figure that now they're too old to learn it."
Subject: Re:Galaxies must be a lot more dynamic than I thou [slashdot.org] (3 September 2005)
"The reason they insist it has to be something spinning is that they have studied almost no plasma fluid dynamics, so they can't understand something blasting out radio, light, and x-rays that doesn't have a star in the middle of it."
etc etc
He's not a cut and paste troll, but he's posted enough similar things in the past that I thought the same thing as the GP when I read this one.
Sounds like "Electric Universe" nonsense (Score:1, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Sounds like "Electric Universe" nonsense (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Sounds like "Electric Universe" nonsense (Score:1)
Re:Sounds like "Electric Universe" nonsense (Score:2)
Re:Sounds like "Electric Universe" nonsense (Score:2, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birkeland_current [wikipedia.org]
kthxbye
Celestial Plasma Physics (Score:3, Interesting)
Replying to trolls is usually a mistake, but fine:
It's not hard to measure astronomical electrical currents: electrical current is directly proportional to magnetic field strength, which is routinely measured using the Zeeman effect. Yes, any place you find a magnetic field, electric charges are in motion. No, the interior
Re:Celestial Plasma Physics (Score:2)
There is no such thing as an "EU theory". EU people have adopted a portfolio of theories and claims from others, some indisputable (interstellar plasma exhibits plasma-dynamic phenomena, film at 11), others ridiculous (Earth orbited Saturn?). I never claimed that Birkeland currents power the sun, and to claim I did is actively dishonest both for you and for your "original poster". As noted, anybody can look at what I did write. (Bark up another tree, AC.)
Congratulatio
Re:Celestial Plasma Physics (Score:1)
Sorry about it (Score:2, Funny)
Sincerely
M' uldh pGar
Chief of PR Intergalactic Council
Re:Sorry about it (Score:1)
Minister of Information in small star system.
50,000 years later, still no response from FEMA (Score:1, Funny)
Mass-extinction? (Score:2)
Possible explaination for the mass extinction of the dinosaurs, and others?
Re:Mass-extinction? (Score:2)
Re:Mass-extinction? (Score:2)
How bad could it be? (Score:2)
Neutron Star vs Magnetar (Score:3, Informative)
There's a good site at http://solomon.as.utexas.edu/~duncan/magnetar.html [utexas.edu] which does a good job of explaining the physics in non-technical terms.
It seems that neutron stars are born on a cusp. If they're spinning fast enough, a self-sustaining dynamo process, similar to that in the Earth's core starts up in the first few milliseconds of it's life. Within a few seconds, energy from the initial immense heat of the star
Re:Neutron Star vs Magnetar (Score:2)
A book by the same name exists (Score:3, Informative)
Interestingly enough, a physicist by the name of Robert Forward (did alot of work with space tethers) published a book called Dragons Egg about life on a neutron star. He actually said it was really a book on neutron star physics described as a science fiction book. Anyways the sequel to it was called Starquake where exactly this happened. Both books were interesting reads, and although this is kind of off topic, it just reminded me of them.
Re:A book by the same name exists (Score:2)
An explosion on a magnetar features in Steven Baxter's Exultant.
Highly Recommended Reading (Score:3, Informative)
The physics used to keep a human-crewed spaceship in close orbit around a neutron star without tidal forces ripping the crew apart are interesting. The appendicies to "Dragon's Egg" have interesting "hard" (well, not really: high school physics should be enough to understand them) derivations.
Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:3, Interesting)
From TFA: Ok, so a magnetar is a type of neutron star with an extremely strong magnetic field. Also from TFA: So, is it a neutron stat or not? I was under the impression that neutron stars were called that because the immense gravitational field squished all the protons and electrons together into neutrons, forming an all-neutron star. It would seem that Wikipedia's definition [wikipedia.org] supports the idea of a non-homogeneous neutron composition. When did it change from being all-neutrons to having a yummy mostly-neutrony center?
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:2)
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:2)
No way. Or at least not to any significant proportion. Unless the number of electrons is the same as the number of protons to an unbelievably high tolerance, the star will blow itself apart. The electromagnetic force is far more powerful than the gravitational.
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:1)
Ahahaha...
Check out this image [wikipedia.org] from the article.
I'll PayPal $10 to anyone who can changes "Solid crust" to "Thin candy shell" and "Heavy liquid interior" to "Yummy mostly-neutrony center".
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:1)
I believe that the confusion you're pointing out comes from two places:
1. The simplistic model of a neutron star being "pure neutrons" is probably intended to get the main point across to lay people. The complexities involved in analyzing the composition of a typical neutron star as a function of radial distance are simply staggering, and it's difficult enough to explain the basic concept of
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:2)
On another tangent, wouldn't a magnetar's extreme magnetic field work to either trap or expel any unbound electrons either in the star itself or around it? As I recall, magnetic fields exert a force on a moving charged particle something like -qVxB, forcing the particle to travel in a helix. What effect would such an extreme field have on electrons inside the star? If there were diff
Re:Is it a neutron star ot not??? (Score:1)
But more likely, the only electrons on the magnetar would be in the thin shell of relatively normal matter that sits on top of the star. Because they would be b
Intergallactic travel (Score:1)
How far outside of the milky way does man now travel?
article + summary wrong (Score:2)
Feb. 2005 article? (Score:1)
ObH2G2: (Score:1)