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Gamma-ray bursts reveal distant galaxies.


A brilliant flash of high-energy radiation recorded on Feb. 22 lasted for less than a minute. But this gamma-ray burst, one of the brightest ever detected, is providing the strongest evidence so far that these cosmic flashbulbs originate in star-forming regions of distant galaxies and are generated by the explosive death of massive stars.

The findings support the notion that these brilliant bursts and their afterglows can enable astronomers to study galaxies that lie too far away and are too dusty for the scientists to easily observe.

The Feb. 22 burst and its X-ray afterglow, first detected by the Italian satellite BeppoSAX, was also examined by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. The burst originated in a galaxy some 8 billion light-years from Earth.

A gamma-ray burst produces a blast of material that expands into surrounding space like a rapidly inflating balloon. This expanding blast wave produces a steady stream of X rays. However, BeppoSAX found that the intensity of the emissions took a sudden downturn, reports Luigi Piro of the Consigilio Nazionale delle Ricerche in Rome.

He suggests the drop in intensity occurred because the blast wave encountered a dense wall of gas that dramatically slowed its expansion. Gas at this density "can only be found in very crowded regions where stars are formed," Piro says.

Radio observations also suggest that the burst exploded in a galaxy undergoing intense star formation. Five hours after BeppoSAX detected the burst, the James Clerk Maxwell telescope atop Hawaii's Mauna Kea recorded a submillimeter radio source at the location of the burst. Surprisingly, the source remained constant rather than fading over time, says Fiona Harrison of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. These and other observations indicate the radio emission is not part of the burst's waning afterglow but is radiation from the burst's home galaxy, she and her colleagues assert.

The submillimeter radiation observed on Earth would have begun as infrared light from the distant galaxy. Expansion of the universe then shifted this light to longer wavelengths. The intensity of the infrared light indicates that at the time the galaxy emitted the radiation, about 8 billion years ago, it was a veritable stellar nursery, churning out the equivalent of 500 suns per year, Harrison says.

In a separate study, Piro has obtained evidence linking the origin of several gamma-ray bursts to the explosion of massive stars. Analyzing the X-ray afterglow of four bursts that predated the Feb. 22 event, he and his colleagues found an abundance of iron. The Feb. 22 burst also bears signs of iron.

Only supernova explosions, which mark the demise of heavyweight stars, can produce iron. Such stars typically weigh a few times as much as the sun. However, the amount of iron observed in these five events indicates that the stars that generated the bursts were more than 10 times as heavy as the sun. The explosive death of such an extremely massive star, which is a sort of souped-up supernova, has become known as a hypernova.

Piro and Harrison presented their teams' findings April 4 at a meeting on gamma-ray astronomy gamma-ray astronomy, study of astronomical objects by analysis of the most energetic electromagnetic radiation they emit. Gamma rays are shorter in wavelength and hence more energetic than X rays (see gamma radiation) but much harder to detect and to pinpoint. X rays and some gamma rays are produced throughout the universe by the same catastrophic astrophysical events, such as supernovas and black holes, and gamma-ray astronomy can be considered an in Baltimore.
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Author:R.C.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 28, 2001
Words:516
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