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Gamma Ray Burst May Be Most Distant Explosion Ever Detected

Gamma Ray Burst

RAPHAEL G. SATTER   05/26/11 07:13 PM ET   AP

LONDON — A group of researchers claim they've found the most distant explosion ever detected, a pulse of high energy radiation sent by a disintegrating star near the very edge of the observable universe.

The stellar blast was first spotted by a NASA satellite in April 2009, but researchers announced Wednesday that they have since gathered data placing it more than 13 billion light years away – meaning that the event took place when the universe was still in its infancy.

Andrew Levan, one of the scientists behind the discovery, said this blast from the past blew open a window onto the universe's early years, showing that massive stars were already dying within the first few hundred million years of the birth of the universe.

This particular explosion wasn't a supernova but a gamma ray burst, the name given to a short but powerful pulse of high energy radiation. Such bursts, thought to result from the collapse of massive stars into black holes, shoot jets of energy across the universe.

Charles Meegan, a NASA researcher in gamma ray astronomy, said that a typical burst "puts out in a few seconds the same energy expended by the sun in its whole 10 billion year life span."

"You can't get your arms around that very easily," he said. "I can't. And I've been thinking about it for decades," added Meegan, who was not involved in the research.

Not only are gamma ray bursts more powerful than supernovae, they're faster too – typically lasting only a few seconds or minutes. They work differently as well. Whereas a supernova spreads its radiation all around, gamma ray bursts shoot it out in narrow beams, like a laser, which can make them hard to detect.

NASA's Neil Gehrels, who serves as the lead scientist on Swift, the gamma-ray detecting satellite which first picked up the distant burst's signal, said that "we only see about one in 1,000 of all the gamma ray bursts that go off."

So when a promising one comes along, scientists take note.

The University of Warwick's Levan said he was at an early morning meeting in Sweden on April 29, 2009, when his phone went off, alerting him to the explosion. From that moment on, it was a race against time. Gamma ray bursts come and go far too quickly for telescopes, but their afterglows linger for a little while longer and can be analyzed by astronomers.

Levan rushed out of the meeting.

"Fortunately the office was next door," he said. "So I was able to rush into the building and get online."

There Levan got a little less lucky. Some of the world's most powerful telescopes were soon tasked with tracking the burst, but the view from Chile's La Silla Observatory was hampered by unfavorable atmospheric conditions, while two Hawaiian telescopes – Gemini North and the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope – were buffeted by high winds. Chile's Very Large Telescope managed to train its eye on the sky for a while, but by then it was already getting light.

The glitches deprived Levan's team of some important data, but they spent the next two years painstakingly trying to build context and double-check their observations. His paper, due to published soon in Astrophysical Journal, stated with 90 percent certainty that the gamma ray burst had been spotted between 13.11 billion and 13.16 billion light years away.

Gehrels, whose satellite identified the burst but who wasn't involved in the paper, said he believed Levan was right – praising his team's "careful analysis."

But other outside experts said they were skeptical. Richard Ellis, a professor of astronomy at the California Institute of Technology, called the discovery "potentially very exciting" but said that there wasn't enough data to justify such a bullish estimate. In any case, he warned of the difficulties associated with peering across such a vast distance.

"This is plonk at the frontier, where we have very little idea what's going on," he said.

Richard McMahon, a professor of astronomy at Cambridge University, made a similar point, pointing out that the mechanics of how gamma ray bursts occurred were still too little understood to rule out the possibility that some other factor could be at play.

"There are still some surprises in store for us," he predicted.

The paper's lead author, Antonio Cucchiara, is at University of California, Berkeley.

___

Online:

NASA Swift Homepage: http://heasarc.nasa.gov/docs/swift/swiftsc.html

Raphael G. Satter can be reached at: http://twitter.com/razhael

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LONDON — A group of researchers claim they've found the most distant explosion ever detected, a pulse of high energy radiation sent by a disintegrating star near the very edge of the observable ...
LONDON — A group of researchers claim they've found the most distant explosion ever detected, a pulse of high energy radiation sent by a disintegrating star near the very edge of the observable ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eventhorizon66
Multiversed
01:20 AM on 05/31/2011
Dr. Bruce Banner - take cover!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ayesha Khan
03:36 AM on 05/30/2011
Look into the Alpha Rays ---- The brain is releasing the Alpha and Beta rays --- its good that this explosion happened---- look into the Alpha, Beta Rays. Find what they can do--- i am not sure but one of these rays are used for controlling Blood circulation, its used in meditation also. Maybe the Researchers know better--- I just Know very Little.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Platzner Post
12:01 AM on 05/30/2011
A Galaxy far far away...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Enfield
09:58 AM on 05/28/2011
I like to read and watch programs about stars and gamma ray bursts. However, I don't know how scientists, no matter how brilliant, can identify the edge of "the observable universe" other than to create a frame of reference or claim to have a neat, elliptical infrared "map" of the universe. I also don't know how they can say that the Milky Way galaxy is 100,000 light years in size and we're located in the lower right hand corner. Is there also a map for that?
12:36 PM on 05/28/2011
The universe is thought to be symmetric around any point, so there's no center, and no absolute edge. The "observable universe" is the part we can see, i.e. the part that's close enough so that light has had time to get to us over the age of the universe. Observers located elsewhere would have a different 'observable universe'.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
05:38 PM on 05/28/2011
We can measure the distance between ourselves and neigboring stars in the galaxy, as well as the position of our galaxy relative to others. That gives us an idea of where we fit, and what it looks like.
01:40 AM on 05/28/2011
Must have been caused by Global Warming.
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
02:41 AM on 05/28/2011
Aren't you clever? Even as abnormally warm surface water temperatures over the Gulf continue to fuel a series of deadly storms that have devastated the Midwest.
11:26 AM on 05/28/2011
you do mean the ones that are fueled by the COOLER than normal waters in the pacific?

Since of course, cold fronts moving from west to east are what cause these tornadoes.....
11:28 AM on 05/28/2011
It would seem that Nasa scientists don't agree with you.

But hey, rosie odonnel does so you must be right.
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10:23 PM on 05/27/2011
Let's try this again!
The last time I posted this I found that the 4 people at the party were all insane:

“" A group of researcher­s claim they've found the most distant explosion ever detected..­.."

It's thought that there's 96% invisibile "dark' energy/mat­ter and only 4% visibles matter in the universe:
Imagine walking into an exciting party of a 100 people and only seeing 4 of them and after talking to all 4 attempting to explain the entire nature and events that were occurring at the party. I'd think that maybe more knowledge about the party would be "detected" by the 96 others who were invisible. But then we wouldn't even know they exist.
Aren't we basically blind when it comes to "detecting­" what's going on in the universe?
"There are still some surprises in store for us,"”
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Rude Monk
No God can stop a hungry man
07:38 PM on 05/27/2011
For all those who are frustrated by the current situation in astrophysics (currently chasing its own tail) -do yourself a favor and check youtube for the works of Bill Gaede ,Hannes Alfven (plasma physics pioneer),Stephen Crothers and many others.
There are alternative theories but not allowed to be discussed by the establishment who are invested and benefit from the old paradigm.
Old concepts (like "relativity" and "quantum theory") are usually replaced when their founders die.We have a curious development:
The Church of Relativity are always recruiting new adepts and the quantum mystics sect are doing the same so we're currently stuck.
This cannot continue if we really want to have progress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
09:04 PM on 05/27/2011
Bill Gaede is a convicted industrial spy.

Hannes Alfven is an outsider with occasionally brilliant ideas. His cosmology is unconvincing.

Stephen Crothers thinks black holes don't exist, despite the very convincing evidence to the contrary.

But have at it, keep cobbling together your chimera.
10:50 PM on 05/27/2011
Jimboy, You've been writing good stuff. Fanned ya, finally.

Dogs playing poker, indeed! Brilliant.
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
02:40 AM on 05/28/2011
The abrasive ascetic has an obsession with non-conformity. He has no interest in accepting something simply due to its being true.
09:23 PM on 05/27/2011
Alfven was a great plasma physicist. As Jimboy points out, his cosmology, conceived in an earlier era, is falsified by modern observations.

The woods are apparently full of people who think they understand physics and astronomy better than the people who work in the fields. They don't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
05:27 PM on 05/28/2011
I know that I know not...

A very simple maxim, yet so poorly grasped even though it was first articulated some 2500 years ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
few77
THE TIME IS NOW
03:33 PM on 05/27/2011
My theory is I don't have one...I do have an Opinion though, and I feel entitled to it. Maybe we are the sub-atomic level of something greater / bigger walking around? The mind of GOD perhaps? Whatever God is to you. To me personally, I have no idea what or who God is; but we'll all know soon enough. Now on the issue of science and proof I say take a look in the mirror. Look at how complex you are. Then look at your body, how it moves, how it reacts etc. No human to date can create the anatomical or physiological aspects of you and me. That in itself is mind blowing. We are truly a miracle of sorts. Along with every other living cell in the multiverse.
09:25 PM on 05/27/2011
You could be right! Now make a testable prediction using your theory. If you can't, it's outside of science.
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MrSimythe
I'm just a guy.
01:03 AM on 05/28/2011
Actually the human body is quite a simple construct. It has but one purpose, the conversion of matter into energy. It's a living furnace if you will. As for man not being able to recreate such things, well I beg to differ. Man has recreated itself. We call them Sims. They eat, sleep, go to the restroom just like you and I. Each has their own personality, and live their own "life" so to speak. The only difference between humans and Sims, is that we can only see them on a computer screen. But is even that so different? Take a picture of a Sim on your computer screen, and zoom in all of the way. You'll see the image break down into lots of tiny colored dots. We call those pixels. Now take a picture of a human being using a high powered electron microscope. You'll see that it's image breaks down into lots of tiny colored dots as well. We just call them atoms. If you're truly interested in having your mind blown, then consider the following. That the "miracle" that is God's creation, you and I, are nothing more than mere figures in a child's video game on a computer screen.
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few77
THE TIME IS NOW
05:24 AM on 05/28/2011
Just give me a new set of lungs that my body wont reject, tomorrow, on back order.
It should be as easy as "a tiny colored dot". Like a pixel on the screen! You really need to pull yourself AWAY from the computer bud. Those atoms that you're talking about are the tip of the iceberg. We are much more complicated than that. We are made up of "sub atomic" stuff as well. Stuff science has only multiple theories on.
When we can recreate the dead, or make a robot move like a human (rather then a robot) I'll be impressed. Until then it's all a smoke screen.
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
01:37 PM on 05/27/2011
Wow, the comments section here is heartbreaking. Science education in this country has really gone downhill... no wonder all our grad students are foreigners.

One gem: "We aren't 13 billion light years from the origin of our universe"

Pardon me while I smack myself in the face.
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hburns1351
I'm too old to be diplomatic
02:00 PM on 05/27/2011
Blame the religious right for that. Their attacks on science in general has resulted in an entire generation unable to reason logically.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDogBear
02:16 PM on 05/27/2011
That's too easy. A lot of the people that comment here think they do understand science and then say the most absurd things (e.g., "black holes aren't real")
09:48 PM on 05/27/2011
I think it's a little more complicated. Science is like the modern 'religion' to some -- it's the ultimate explanation of what happens. A certain kind of conspiracy theorist and narcissistic 'unrecognized genius' is drawn to this. They delude themselves into thinking that they have the truth, but 'the establishment' is 'brainwashed' and won't listen to them! They are the classic cranks, and there are more of them than you could shake a stick at.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDogBear
02:17 PM on 05/27/2011
Yes, really pathetic. Do you have any sites that regularly have good articles and discussion on science? One I like is Dawkin's site: http://richarddawkins.net/
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
03:26 PM on 05/27/2011
Thanks! I don't actually read much science news, just the journals I have to read for work. I still get Scientific American, which is pretty pop but better than the other science rags out there. The gold standard for scientific argument on the web is skepticalscience.com, which pretty much demolishes every global warming denial "argument" but it has a narrow focus.

I'll check out Dawkins' site. I've always liked the guy.
11:37 PM on 05/28/2011
Subscribe to New Scientist - lots of very good articles at the border of too technical, and not technical enough.
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HeadlessHessian
Contra el prejuicio.
12:50 PM on 05/27/2011
"13 billion light years away"

wow...seems like yesterday! :-)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverball
12:34 PM on 05/27/2011
"einstein" by walter issacson....fascinating read and very well written....physicists come up with theory's and sometimes they are proven...often not and especially in their lifetime....all are theories and very abstract concepts....it's a moving target....always.....some of einstein's theories were wrong, but he got it right with most parts of relativity (in his 20's when he was a clerk at a patent office)....he pissed off many in his field at the time, because they thought he was (basically) an arrogant, young whippersnapper (for lack of a better word)....hence, they DID NOT award him the nobel prize for it...(he won later for a conformation he did on another theory).....he is proven to be one of the top 2 or 3 thinkers in ALL of civilization.....as his theories became guidelines for further and advanced thinking and studies.....both proving and disproving them....1 of 2 or 3 in all of civilization...think about it.....
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Rude Monk
No God can stop a hungry man
01:29 PM on 05/27/2011
Some might say that einstein was never a "genius" but the media had a role in making him popular.
He was a patent clerk who came across interesting ideas thought by other people.
Also,he was familiar with the work of Lorentz and Poincare so he repackaged their theories (one example-Einstein replaced the concept of ether with a mathematical construct called "space-time")-then he came up with the Theory of Relativity.
The accusations of blatant fraud soon followed him.
What many of contemporary thinkers like myself don't understand is the need for personal idols expressed by many rational persons.
First-why would you have a deep need to worship someone,is it because at heart you're still a follower,don't have a church but still looking for one?
Second-einstein was a flawed individual,we need better examples not the media fashioned ones.
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hburns1351
I'm too old to be diplomatic
01:44 PM on 05/27/2011
Okay...here's the thing....personal attacks are the lowest form of criticism. Personal attacks against a dead man are even lower. Questioning, even attacking a theory is fine, expected and, in science, encouraged. Attacking the man is cowardice and an admission that the science is impeccable. What's even more cowardly is attacking the man while claiming you're not attacking the man and rather saying that there are 'questions'. Of course the man was flawed...all men (and women) are flawed but personal flaws do not undo the work.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AntiClast
If it ain't broke, don't break it!
05:04 PM on 05/27/2011
The Nobel Prize is awarded for SIGNIFICANT work, not for beautiful genius work. General relatively was not decisively confirmed until last week. It hasn't impacted our lives much at all. Special relatively is simpler and has some applications but isn't a big impact.

Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize for predicting the photoelectric effect. This was carried out and shown to be in accord with Planck's idea of quanta. This, and a lot of follow on work, changed our lives immensely.

Planck's paper had been mostly ignored until Einstein looked at it, and his hypothesis of quanta ignored; Planck himself hated the idea and continued to work to find a way around it.

I think the Nobel Prize decisions was rational, although I might argue Einstein should also have gotten one for demonstrating that atoms are real (Brownian motion).
09:31 PM on 05/27/2011
"not decisively confirmed until last week".

You're thinking of Gravity Probe B's results, which demonstrated frame-dragging. But this was already foreshadowed from the precession of the amazing Taylor-Hulse binary pulsar. GR has been tested over and over, with increasing precision and sophistication, and it's passed every time. It might not be exactly right, but it sure looks to be very close.
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silverball
11:06 AM on 05/28/2011
i repeat....."1 of 2 or 3 in all of civilizati­on...think about it..... "......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opn2itsd
"progress" is actually positive
12:04 PM on 05/27/2011
it was put there by g0d to test our faith
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joel Kent Melville
11:49 AM on 05/27/2011
the multiverse is ever expanding.
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11:44 AM on 05/27/2011
Once again, I'm astounded by these so-called scientists who think they can understand the universe with stupid concepts like "observation," "deduction," and "logic."

Every true believer knows that the Earth is 6000 years old, dinosaurs were wiped out in the Great Flood, and gamma rays bursts happen with the Creator lights His farts.
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10:57 AM on 05/27/2011
" A group of researchers claim they've found the most distant explosion ever detected...."

It's thought that there's 96% invisibile "dark' energy/matter and only 4% visibles matter in the universe:
Imagine walking into an exciting party of a 100 people and only seeing 4 of them and after talking to all 4 attempting to explain the entire nature and events that were occurring at the party. I'd think that maybe more knowledge about the party would be "detected" by the 96 others who were invisible. But then we wouldn't even know they exist.
Aren't we basically blind when it comes to "detecting" what's going on in the universe?
"There are still some surprises in store for us,"
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11:08 AM on 05/27/2011
That there is dark energy/matter does not mean that we are looking at only 4% of the universe. What it means is that we don't yet understand and can account for all the energy/mass in the universe.

We started out blind when humans first started thinking about the universe, we have gained a lot of sight since then and, steadily but surely, we are learning more every day.
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Rude Monk
No God can stop a hungry man
01:38 PM on 05/27/2011
There is no such thing as "dark matter" or "dark energy".
It was invented by theoretical mathematicians to support their fantasies and their foray into metaphysical territory,otherwise called "the theory of relativity".
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Eileenla
Author, "Sacred Economics"
02:06 PM on 05/27/2011
Thank you. I also say there are no such things as black holes. Those too were invented to explain the fact that there is not enough gravity in the center of a galaxy to keep it from flying apart, given the ASSUMPTION that gravity is the prime force holding a galaxy together.
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
03:32 PM on 05/27/2011
Please explain to me then the rotational coherence of galaxies not predicted by their visible mass alone... Or explain to me what other form of energy is causing the rate of expansion of the universe...