New kind of cosmic energy
Using Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Parkes telescope, the astronomers from West Virginia University reported of radio bursts appearing startlingly strong despite starting one-and-a-half billion light years away.
The research team, led by Assistant Professor Duncan Lorimer of West Virginia University, reported their discovery in the online journal Science Express.
“Normally the kind of cosmic activity we’re looking for at this distance would be very faint but this was so bright that it saturated the equipment,” said Professor Matthew Bailes of Swinburne University in Melbourne.
The burst, lasting just five milliseconds, was so bright that at the time it was first recorded it was dismissed as man-made radio interference.
It put out a huge amount of power (10exp33 Joules), equivalent to a large (2000MW) power station running for two billion, billion years.
Exotic celestial event
“The burst may have been produced by an exotic event such as the collision of two neutron stars or be the last gasp of a black hole as it evaporates completely,” Professor Lorimer said.
However, it was only discovered after a post-graduate student, David Narkevik, re-analysed the data, taken with the Parkes telescope, six years later.
The astronomers can estimate how often the bursts occur despite only observing one burst.
“We’d expect to see a few bursts over the whole sky every day,” said Dr John Reynolds, Officer in Charge at CSIRO’s Parkes Observatory.
“A new telescope being built in Western Australia will be ideal for finding more of these rare, transient events.
”The Australian SKA Pathfinder, which is going to be built by 2012, will have a very wide field of view—be able to see a very large piece of sky—which is exactly what you want for this kind of work,” he said.
“The burst may have been produced by an exotic event such as the collision of two neutron stars.”
Meanwhile, the researchers will comb archived data from the Parkes telescope for more radio bursts.
The discovery of the radio burst is similar to the discovery of gamma-ray bursts in the 1970s, when military satellites revealed flashes of gamma-rays appearing all over the sky. One kind—the so-called long-period bursts—was eventually identified as the explosion (supernova) of a massive star with the associated formation of a black hole.
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Date Published: October 01, 2007
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