|   | 
Credit: Gemini Observatory /   
NSF /   
AURA,    
D. Fox &   
A. Cucchiara    
(Penn State U.), and    
E. Berger    
(Harvard Univ.)    
   
Explanation:
An explosion so powerful it was seen clear across the visible universe was recorded   
in gamma-radiation last week by NASA's orbiting    
Swift Observatory.   
   
Farther than any known    
galaxy,    
quasar, or optical    
supernova, the    
gamma-ray burst recorded   
last week was clocked at    
redshift 8.2, making it the farthest explosion of any type    
yet detected.     
   
Occurring only 630 million years after the    
Big Bang,    
GRB 090423 detonated so early that astronomers had no direct evidence that anything   
explodable even existed back then.   
   
The faint infrared afterglow of    
GRB 090423 was recovered by large ground telescopes within minutes of being   
discovered.   
   
The afterglow is circled in the above picture taken by the large    
Gemini North Telescope in    
Hawaii,    
USA.   
   
An exciting possibility is that this    
gamma-ray burst occurred   
in one of the very    
first generation of stars and    
announced the birth of an early    
black hole.       
   
Surely,    
GRB 090423    
provides unique data from a relatively    
unexplored epoch in our universe and a distant beacon from which the intervening   
universe can be studied.   
   
   
    
   
   
   
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: gamma-ray burst - redshift - early universe
Publications with words: gamma-ray burst - redshift - early universe
See also:
