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Bursting a theory on gamma-ray flashes.


Typically lasting only a few seconds, gamma-ray bursters act like cosmic flashbulbs: The previously unseen objects unleash a flood of high-energy photons and then vanish -- apparently forever. With no counterpart in any other band of the electromagnetic spectrum electromagnetic spectrum

Total range of frequencies or wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation. The spectrum ranges from waves of long wavelength (low frequency) to those of short wavelength (high frequency); it comprises, in order of increasing frequency (or decreasing
, including visible light, these ephemeral enigmas have intrigued and confounded scientists ever since their discovery in 1973.

And the mystery continues. A new survey of these bursters, reported this week, appears to dash the prevailing theory about what type of cosmic powerhouse might briefly spew such energetic emissions.

Although astronomers have tried in vain to match the locations of bursters with the positions of particular stars or galaxies, previous data seemed to suggest that these celestial beacons emanate from observable objects in the Milky Way -- most likely from violent outbursts on or near neutron stars, condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 stellar objects that tend to cluster near the center of our galaxy (SN: 6/8/91, p.365).

But gamma-ray bursters occur uniformly throughout the sky, not in an expected clustering either toward the center of the Milky Way or along its disk, scientists working with NASA's Gamma Ray gamma ray

Penetrating very short-wavelength electromagnetic radiation, similar to an X-ray but of higher energy, that is emitted spontaneously by some radioactive substances (see gamma decay; radioactivity).
 Observatory (GRO GRO Guerrero (Estado de México)
GRO General Register Office (UK)
GRO Greater Research Opportunities
GRO Gamma Ray Observatory
GRO Growth-Related Oncogene
GRO Greensboro, North Carolina
) revealed this week. That finding leaves astronomers with two equally unsettling--and exciting--explanations for the bursters, says GRO investigator Gerald J. Fishman of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), the original home of NASA, is a lead center for propulsion, Space Shuttle propulsion, Shuttle external fuel tank, crew training and payloads, International Space Station (ISS) design and construction, for computers, networks, and  in Huntsville, Ala. The 117 flashes observed with GRO since its launch in April came either from a cloud of small exotic objects a few light-years from Earth or from powerful sources--perhaps a new form of matter--near the edge of the observable universe.

"[Our finding] will upset a lot of people because most theories of the past 10 or 15 years have centered around neutron stars as the source of gamma-ray bursts," Fishman says. "This surprising result indicates that gamma-ray bursts are not associated with the large-scale structure of our galaxy."

Fishman and other astronomers point out that an unusual feature of the surveyed bursts argues against a relatively nearby source for the gamma-ray emissions. GRO carries a group of eight detectors--collectively known as the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE BATSE Burst and Transient Source Experiment ) -- that can spot gamma-ray bursters 10 times weaker than those observed by previous space-borne detectors.

BATSE observed relatively few low-intensity events, however. If nearby objects produced the bulk of the bursters, Fishman says, researchers should also have seen a substantial number of faint flares, presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 coming from more distant sources.

Another possibility -- that the brief outbursts arise from objects somewhat farther away in the halo of material that orbits the outskirts and central bulge of our galaxy -- also seems unlikely, says Bohdan Paczynski, a theoretical astrophysicist at Princeton University. To match the distribution of bursters cataloged by GRO, he says, the distribution of gamma-ray-emitting halo objects would have to be highly uniform -- a feature unlike any exhibited by known collections of stars in that region.

Since 1986, Paczynski and a few other researchers have favored an extragalactic ex·tra·ga·lac·tic  
adj.
Located or originating beyond the Milky Way.

Adj. 1. extragalactic - outside or beyond a galaxy; "extragalactic nebula"
 origin for the flashes. In an articlein the July 1 ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL -- written before GRO's launch -- he and his co-workers anticipated the new BATSE results and suggested that stars in distant galaxies might account for the distribution of these mysterious gamma-ray outbursts. "It's sensational; it's truly a revolutionary result in astrophysics astrophysics, application of the theories and methods of physics to the study of stellar structure, stellar evolution, the origin of the solar system, and related problems of cosmology. ," he says of the GRO finding.

If the extragalactic model proves accurate, Paczynski notes, gamma-ray bursters may represent ancient objects billions of light-years from Earth, whose intense flashes of energy signify events in the very early history of the universe. In the same article, his group proposes that collisions between hypothetical, superdense su·per·dense  
adj.
Of or relating to an extreme condition in which matter is forced into nonclassical states, as when electrons are forced into protons, leaving only neutrons, or the matter is compressed beyond this point into a singularity.
 objects called strange stars might produce the extragalactic radiation.

Though colliding neutron stars in distant galaxies would create similar bursts, he says that most of the gamma rays Gamma rays

Electromagnetic radiation emitted from excited atomic nuclei as an integral part of the process whereby the nucleus rearranges itself into a state of lower excitation (that is, energy content).
 would probably be unleashed inside the stars and might not reach Earth. However, collisions among strange stars -- objects so dense that neutrons and protons would break into their constituent quarks -- should create gamma rays on their surfaces. Such photons would stand a greater chance of reaching Earth relatively unimpeded unimpeded
Adjective

not stopped or disrupted by anything

Adj. 1. unimpeded - not slowed or prevented; "a time of unimpeded growth"; "an unimpeded sweep of meadows and hills afforded a peaceful setting"
, he says.

The speculation about such a new class of stars may seem like pie in the sky. But Fishman notes that at present this explanation for the bursts seems as reasonable as any other. Paczynski adds that a key test could validate the notion of distant sources, although it could not differentiate between strange stars and ordinary matter. Gravity would bend some of the light rays from distant, individual bursters, delaying their arrival at Earth. Thus, over a period of years, GRO might detect "repeaters" -- a pair of identical gammary bursts separated by days or months, Paczynski says.

Researchers also announced this week that GRO's Compton Gamma Ray Telescope captured the first image of a gamma-ray burster A mechanical device that separates continuous paper forms into cut sheets. A burster can be attached to the end of a collator, which separates multipart forms into single parts. . The telescope used a layered pair of detectors to render the portrait. Researchers relied on a small gamma-ray detector aboard the Jupiter-bound Ulysses spacecraft, which also observed the intense burster, to help pinpoint the source's position in the sky.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1991, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:in space
Author:Cowen, Ron
Publication:Science News
Date:Sep 28, 1991
Words:817
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