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Universe's most extreme energy - Gamma Ray Bursts PDF Print E-mail
The News - Science-Astronomy
March 17, 2009
gamma ray burst extreme energy
Astronomers now have their best-ever view of the most extreme energy in the cosmos with a new map combining three month's worth of data, a team of scientists said today.

The map is based on data collected by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, which has scopes and cameras that peer out into the universe — from within our solar system to galaxies billions of light-years away — in search of the sources of the highest energy radiation, called gamma rays.

Gamma rays sit on the far left of the electromagnetic, or light, spectrum, with shorter wavelengths and higher energy than ultraviolet light and even X-rays.

The all-sky image produced by the Fermi team shows us how the cosmos would look if our eyes could detect radiation 150 million times more energetic than visible light. The view merges observations from Fermi's Large Area Telescope spanning 87 days, from August 4, 2008, to October 30, 2008.

"Fermi has given us a deeper and better-resolved view of the gamma-ray sky than any previous space mission," said Peter Michelson, the lead scientist for the LAT at Stanford University. "We're watching flares from supermassive black holes in distant galaxies and seeing pulsars, high-mass binary systems, and even a globular cluster in our own."

The map includes one object familiar to everyone: the sun. "Because the sun appears to move against the background sky, it produces a faint arc across the upper right of the map," Michelson explained.

During the next few years, as solar activity increases, scientists expect the sun to produce growing numbers of high-energy flares. "No other instrument will be able to observe solar flares in the LAT's energy range," Michelson said.

From the map, the Fermi team created a "top 10" list of five sources within the Milky Way and five beyond our galaxy.

The top sources within our galaxy include the sun; a star system known as LSI +61 303, which pairs a massive normal star with a super-dense neutron star; PSR J1836+5925, which is one of many new pulsars, a type of spinning neutron star that emits gamma-ray beams; and the globular cluster 47 Tucanae, a sphere of ancient stars 15,000 light-years away.

Top extragalactic sources include NGC 1275, a galaxy that lies 225 million light years away and is known for intense radio emissions; the dramatically flaring active galaxies 3C 454.3 and PKS 1502+106, both more than 6 billion light years away; and PKS 0727-115, which is thought to be a type of active galaxy called a quasar.

The Fermi top 10 also includes two sources — one within the Milky Way plane and one beyond it — that researchers have yet to identify.

A paper describing the 205 brightest sources the LAT sees has been submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Supplement.

"This is the mission's first major science product, and it's a big step toward producing our first source catalog later this year," said David Thompson, a Fermi deputy project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

© 2009 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

 

 
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