Hi Friends,
Due to the interest here on Five Doves with signs in the sun, moon and stars, I thought you might be interested in
further research on Gamma Ray Bursts. I know Marilyn Agee will enjoy this article, because it reveals the secret
to a mystery. Keep looking up.
Agape,
Michael C.
For Immediate Release: 27 April 2015
Strange Supernova is "Missing Link" in Gamma-Ray Burst Connection
Astronomers
using the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array (VLA) have
found a long-sought "missing link" between supernova explosions that
generate gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and those that don't. The scientists
found that a stellar explosion seen in 2012 has many characteristics
expected of one that generates a powerful burst of gamma rays, yet no
such burst occurred.
"This
is a striking result that provides a key insight about the mechanism
underlying these explosions," said Sayan Chakraborti, of the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). "This object fills in
a gap between GRBs and other supernovae of this type, showing us that a
wide range of activity is possible in such blasts," he added.
The
object, called Supernova 2012ap (SN 2012ap) is what astronomers term a
core-collapse supernova. This type of blast occurs when the nuclear
fusion reactions at the core of a very massive star no longer can
provide the energy needed to hold up the core against the weight of the
outer parts of the star. The core then collapses catastrophically into a
superdense neutron star or a black hole. The rest of the star's
material is blasted into space in a supernova explosion.
The
most common type of such a supernova blasts the star's material outward
in a nearly-spherical bubble that expands rapidly, but at speeds far
less than that of light. These explosions produce no burst of gamma
rays.
In
a small percentage of cases, the infalling material is drawn into a
short-lived swirling disk surrounding the new neutron star or black
hole. This accretion disk generates jets of material that move outward
from the disk's poles at speeds approaching that of light. This
combination of a swirling disk and its jets is called an "engine," and
this type of explosion produces gamma-ray bursts.
The new research shows, however, that not all "engine-driven" supernova explosions produce gamma-ray bursts.
"This
supernova had jets moving at nearly the speed of light, and those jets
were quickly slowed down, just like the jets we see in gamma-ray
bursts," said Alicia Soderberg, also of CfA.
An
earlier supernova seen in 2009 also had fast jets, but its jets
expanded freely, without experiencing the slowdown characteristic of
those that generate gamma-ray bursts. The free expansion of the 2009
object, the scientists said, is more like what is seen in supernova
explosions with no engine, and probably indicates that its jet contained
a large percentage of heavy particles, as opposed to the lighter
particles in gamma-ray-burst jets. The heavy particles more easily make
their way through the material surrounding the star.
"What
we see is that there is a wide diversity in the engines in this type of
supernova explosion," Chakraborti said. "Those with strong engines and
lighter particles produce gamma-ray bursts, and those with weaker
engines and heavier particles don't," he added.
"This
object shows that the nature of the engine plays a central role in
determining the characteristics of this type of supernova explosion,"
Soderberg said.
Chakraborti
and Soderberg worked with an international team of scientists from five
continents. In addition to the VLA, they also used data from the Giant
Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT) in India and the InterPlanetary Network
(IPN) of spacecraft equipped with GRB detectors. The team, led by
Chakraborti, is reporting their work in a paper accepted to the Astrophysical Journal.
Other articles, led by co-authors Raffaella Margutti and Dan
Milisavljevic, also report on the X-ray and optical follow-up on SN
2012ap using a suite of space and ground-based facilities.
The
National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National
Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated
Universities, Inc.