Craft spies new class of gamma-ray sources.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). are to visible light what slam dancing is to the fox trot. These high-energy emissions reveal some of the most violent choreography in the universe--the birth of black holes, the explosive collapse of ordinary stars, and the collision of charged particles spewed by fierce stellar winds. Such theatrics the·at·rics n. 1. (used with a sing. verb) The art of the theater. 2. (used with a pl. verb) Theatrical effects or mannerisms; histrionics. elude detection at the more quiescent wavelengths of visible light. It now appears that some of the drama revealed by gamma rays rages in our own neighborhood. Roughly half the 120 unidentified sources of high-energy gamma-ray emissions in the Milky Way--those at midgalactic latitudes--may come from a swath of massive stars that lies only a few hundred light-years from the solar system. This structure, known as the Gould belt, passes through the galactic plane at a 20 [degrees] angle. Those 60 or so gamma-ray sources may comprise a new class of objects, distinct from the 60 other mystery sources sprinkled along the plane of our galaxy, assert Neil Gehrels and his colleagues at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) is a major NASA space research laboratory established on May 1, 1959 as NASA's first space flight center. GSFC employs approximately 10,000 civil servants and contractors, and is located approximately 6.5 miles northeast of Washington, D.C. in Greenbelt, Md. They describe their findings in the March 23 NATURE. Astronomers had previously noted that the distribution of the midlatitude gammaray sources, recorded by the EGRET telescope aboard NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Space observatory in service from 1991 to 2000 that was designed to identify the sources of celestial gamma rays. It was named after physicist Arthur Holly Compton. (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 ), coincides with the Gould belt. A new analysis strengthens that association and reveals that those sources have lower energy and are intrinsically fainter than those that lie along the galactic plane. "Together, the findings provide compelling evidence that the belt is an important birthplace of gamma-ray sources," says Isabelle A. Grenier of the University of Paris and the Centre d'Etudes de Saclay in Gif-sur-Yvette, France, in the same issue of NATURE. The midlatitude emissions have lower luminosity luminosity, in astronomy, the rate at which energy of all types is radiated by an object in all directions. A star's luminosity depends on its size and its temperature, varying as the square of the radius and the fourth power of the absolute surface temperature. because they are generated by a different process than the emissions produced along the plane, Gehrels suggests. The gamma rays in the plane may come from strong magnetic fields magnetic fields, n.pl the spaces in which magnetic forces are detectable; created by magnetostrictive ultrasonic scalers to cause the tips of instruments such as ultrasonic scalers to vibrate. possessed by the dense remains of massive stars thousands of light-years distant. However, midlatitude gamma rays may arise from collisions of charged particles in the powerful winds of active, rapidly rotating stars in the Gould belt. The apparent proximity of the midlatitude sources will offer a unique view of how particles are accelerated and how gamma rays are produced, Gehrels says. He cautions, however, that because astronomers can't measure the distance to the gamma-ray sources, the association with the Gould belt remains uncertain. Current gamma-ray telescopes can't pinpoint the location of sources to better than 1 square degree, twice the size of the sun as it appears on the sky, Grenier says. Scheduled for launch in 2005, the GammaRay Large Area Space Telescope will have at least 10 times that positional accuracy. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , GRO may have had its last hurrah. One of its three gyroscopes failed last December. If another dies, engineers may not be able to control the craft's reentry reentry n. taking back possession and going into real property which one owns, particularly when a tenant has failed to pay rent or has abandoned the property, or possession has been restored to the owner by judgment in an unlawful detainer lawsuit. through Earth's atmosphere. The space agency will soon decide whether to bring down GRO in a few months. |
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