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First supper: X rays may mark eating habits of baby black holes.


To announce their arrival, black holes give off a birth cry--an energetic flash of light known as a gamma-ray burst gamma-ray burst
n.
A short-lived, localized, and intense burst of gamma radiation that originates outside the solar system from an unknown source.
. Now, astronomers have evidence that just minutes later, the newborns emit powerful X-ray burps as well.

NASA's Swift spacecraft is the first to record these never-before-seen hiccups Hiccups Definition

Hiccups are the result of an involuntary, spasmodic contraction of the diaphragm followed by the closing of the throat.
Description
 because it can slew its X-ray telescope to just the right patch of sky immediately after the craft detects a gamma-ray burst. One of the newly detected X-ray flares, recorded 12 minutes after a gamma-ray burst on May 2, packed about as much energy as the burst itself. David N. Burrows and Peter Meszaros of Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania State University, main campus at University Park, State College; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855, opened 1859 as Farmers' High School.  in State College and 32 colleagues describe their findings in an upcoming Science.

The observations may illuminate the first minutes of a black hole's life and suggest that massive stars often explode in a series of pyrotechnic events, rather than in a single blast. "Stars are exploding two, three, and sometimes four times in the first minutes following the initial explosion," says Burrows.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a leading theory, most gamma-ray bursts arise when the core of a massive, rapidly rotating star collapses under its own weight. The collapsed core becomes a black hole, which shoots out jets of material at nearly the speed of light, hurling the star's outer layers into space. Collisions between lumps of material in the jets generate the gamma-ray bursts, the most powerful explosions in the cosmos since the Big Bang big bang

Model of the origin of the universe, which holds that it emerged from a state of extremely high temperature and density in an explosive expansion 10 billion–15 billion years ago.
.

After exiting the star, a jet slams into gas and dust in space. This collision generates an afterglow afterglow

small amounts of light emitted by a phosphor after the stimulating radiation has ceased. Seen in x-ray intensifying screens and fluoroscopic screens.
 that may begin an hour or so after the burst and can last from hours to months. The glow begins with X rays and ends with radio waves Radio waves
Electromagnetic energy of the frequency range corresponding to that used in radio communications, usually 10,000 cycles per second to 300 billion cycles per second.
.

The newly observed X-ray flares, which rise and fade rapidly, fill in what had been "a big blank" between an initial burst and the afterglow, says Meszaros. His team proposes that the X-ray hiccups may trace the early eating habits of the infant black holes. As a black hole swallows gas and dust, the doomed material emits a last gasp of high-energy radiation--the X-ray emissions that Swift detected.

Coauthor Stan Woosley of the University of California, Santa Cruz The University of California, Santa Cruz, also known as UC Santa Cruz or UCSC, is a public, collegiate university, one of the ten campuses of the University of California.  notes that a newborn black hole has an abundance of material on which to chow down. That's because much of the gas and dust in the jets fails to escape the hole's gravity, he says. "It goes out a ways and then falls back a few minutes later, reenergizing a new round of [eating] and jet production by the black hole." There could be other explanations for the hiccups, cautions Meszaros. "It's like we just entered a new toy store" and are still trying to figure out what's there, he says.
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Author:Cowen, R.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 27, 2005
Words:455
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