Mercury,
September/October 2003 Table of Contents
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Image
courtesy of David Aguilar (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics). |
by
Dan Reichart
After
30 years of bewilderment, astronomers finally know that collapsing
massive stars generate most gamma-ray bursts.
Gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs) were first detected in the late 1960s by American
military satellites designed to monitor Soviet compliance with the
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. The United States thought the Soviets might
violate the treaty by testing nuclear weapons behind the Moon. The
satellites detected no clandestine nuclear explosions, but they
discovered something far more interesting: powerful bursts of gamma
rays emanating from random directions in space. Gamma rays are like
X rays, but even more energetic — the highest energy form
of light — meaning these bursts were exploding with unimaginable
violence. By 1973, 14 GRBs had been discovered, and when Los Alamos
scientist Ray Klebesadel announced their existence to the world,
the race began to solve one of astronomy’s greatest mysteries.
Almost
immediately, astronomers conceived more theories to explain GRBs
than the number of detected GRBs — a situation that did not
reverse itself until 1992, a year after NASA launched the Compton
Gamma-Ray Observatory. Compton’s BATSE instrument, which detected
GRBs at a remarkable rate of about one per day, showed that GRBs
occur in all directions with equal probability. This ruled out a
large number of theories in which GRBs were thought to be explosions
associated with objects in the disk of our galaxy, such as neutron
stars. But the statistics were not good enough to rule out models
in which the GRBs were caused by neutron stars in an extended halo
around our galaxy.
BATSE
also allowed us to identify two distinct classes of GRBs: long-
and short-duration GRBs. Long-duration GRBs, which are more common,
emit gamma rays for about 2 seconds to several minutes, and their
gamma rays tend to be lower in energy. Much has been learned about
these GRBs over the past 6 years. Short-duration GRBs last from
tens of milliseconds to about 2 seconds, and their gamma rays tend
to be of higher energy. They remain a mystery to this day.
By
1997, the Italian/Dutch BeppoSAX satellite allowed astronomers to
pinpoint several long-duration GRBs on the same day they occurred,
leading to a revolutionary discovery: GRBs continue to shine from
X-rays to radio waves for days, sometimes even months, after the
brief gamma-ray phase has ended. Afterglow spectra showed that GRBs
occur in galaxies billions of light-years away. For the gamma-ray
phase even to be detectable at such great distances, GRBs have to
be mind-bogglingly explosive, beating supernovae by six to nine
orders of magnitude. Overnight, GRBs claimed the title of "Biggest
Bangs Since the Big Bang Itself."
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