Sat Nov 06, 2004 4:44 am by Sirius
My astronomy book, in a pdf format, i did not type all of this...:
What are Gamma-ray bursts, and what are gamma rays?
Gamma ray bursts (GRBs for short) are intense and short (approximately 0.1-100 seconds long) bursts of gamma-ray radiation that occur all over the sky approximately once per day at very large distances from Earth. Gamma rays are very energetic photons (E>10^5 eV), which represent the most extreme portion of the electromagnetic spectrum (ranging from radio waves at the lowest energies through visible optical light at higher energies, to gamma rays at the highest energies).
Where do Gamma-ray bursts occur?
Up until the 1990s and the launch of the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO; see next question) there was a heated debate in the astronomical community about the source of, and distance to gamma ray bursts. One group claimed that gamma ray bursts occur in our own galaxy (the Milky Way), while others claimed that they occur in very distant galaxies. The main reason put forward by the group which claimed a local origin was the extreme energy release that is necessary to explain the observed emission from gamma ray bursts (see question 10). However, from the information gathered by CGRO, and later confirmation from observations of gamma-ray burst afterglows (see below), it was determined unambiguously that gamma-ray bursts take place in very distant galaxies (several billion light years away). The most distant Gamma-ray burst detected so far occured 13 billion light years away. This means that the gamma ray emission from gamma ray bursts that we observe now has been emitted billions of years ago, when the Universe was much younger.
How are gamma-ray bursts detected?
Gamma ray bursts are detected by satellites orbiting the Earth and travelling through the Solar system. They can only be detected from space because the Earth's atmosphere absorbs gamma rays and therefore we cannot observe them from the ground. The first gamma ray bursts were detected by the Vela satellites, which were launched in the 1960s to ensure compliance with the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Since then several thousand gamma ray bursts have been detected by satellites such as the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) and the Interplanetary Network (IPN).
(Meaning GRBs cannot hurt Earth, atmosphere)
Gamma ray bursts release extremely large amount of energy - approximately 10^52 ergs (or 10^45 joules), with the most extreme bursts releasing up to 10^54 ergs. This is the equivalent of turning a star like the Sun into pure energy (using Einstein's famous equation E=mc^2). This is also the amount of energy released by 1000 stars like the Sun over their entire lifetime! In practice, over the few seconds that a gamma ray burst occurs, it releases almost the same amount of energy as the entire Universe! This exteremly large energy release is the reason that astronomers initially believed that gamma ray bursts come from our own galaxy (see question 6). For those of us who live with rolling blackouts (i.e. Californians), the energy from a gamma ray burst (if it was converted to electricity) could supply the entire world's energy needs for a billion billion billion (that's 1 with 27 zeroes after it) years!
What is the source (progenitor) of gamma-ray bursts?
In the first years of gamma ray burst research there were more proposed sources (or progenitors) for gamma ray bursts than the actual number of gamma ray bursts detected! However, ever since it was determined that gamma ray bursts occur at very large distances (and therefore release huge amounts of energy) the list of proposed progenitors shrunk into two main classes: very massive stars, and binary (2 star) systems composed of neutron stars or black holes. It is now thought that the "long and soft" bursts come from massive stars, while the "short and hard" bursts come from binary systems. Recently, observations of GRB 011121 (Bloom et al. 2002; Price et al. 2002) revealed a SN explosion which accompanied the GRB, and a circumburst environment typical of what is usually found around massive stars (see more on this intersting burst below). These results support the idea that the "long and soft" bursts are the end product of massive stars.
How are massive stars thought to produce gamma ray bursts?
Astronomers now think that the iron cores of some very massive stars (at least 30 times more massive than the Sun) can collapse into black holes several million years after they form. The energy released in the formation of the black hole emerges out of the collapsed star in the form of a gamma ray burst. Gamma ray burst astronomers call this the "collapsar" model. Other names are "hypernova" or "failed supernova" models. These names hint that there may be a connection between gamma ray bursts and supernovae (see below).