首页 青海站概况 机构设置 新闻动态 望远镜设备介绍 人员队伍 人才招聘 科研产出 下载专区 科普基地 ENGLISH
ENGLISH
Introduction
MWISP
News
Proposal
现在位置:首页 > ENGLISH > News
Blast from the Past Gives Clues About Early Universe
| 25-10-24 | 【 【打印】【关闭】

Astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array (VLA)  radio telescope have gained tantalizing insights into the nature of the  most distant object ever observed in the Universe -- a gigantic stellar  explosion known as a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB).

The explosion was detected on April 23 by NASA's Swift satellite, and scientists soon realized that it was more than 13 billion light-years from Earth. It represents an event that occurred 630 million years after the Big Bang, when the Universe was only four percent of its current age of 13.7 billion years.

"This explosion provides an unprecedented look at an era when the  Universe was very young and also was undergoing drastic changes. The  primal cosmic darkness was being pierced by the light of the first stars  and the first galaxies were beginning to form. The star that exploded  in this event was a member of one of these earliest generations of  stars," said Dale Frail of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory.

Astronomers turned telescopes from around the world to study the  blast, dubbed GRB 090423. The VLA first looked for the object the day  after the discovery, detected the first radio waves from the blast a week later, then recorded changes in the object until it faded from view more than two months later.

"It's important to study these explosions with many kinds of  telescopes. Our research team combined data from the VLA with data from  X-ray and infrared telescopes to piece together some of the physical  conditions of the blast," said Derek Fox of Pennsylvania State  University. "The result is a unique look into the very early Universe  that we couldn't have gotten any other way," he added.

The scientists concluded that the explosion was more energetic than  most GRBs, was a nearly-spherical blast, and that it expanded into a  tenuous and relatively uniform gaseous medium surrounding the star.

Astronomers suspect that the very first stars in the Universe were  very different -- brighter, hotter, and more massive -- from those that  formed later. They hope to find evidence for these giants by observing  objects as distant as GRB 090423 or more distant.

"The best way to distinguish these distant, early-generation stars is by studying their explosive deaths, as supernovae  or Gamma Ray Bursts," said Poonam Chandra, of the Royal Military  College of Canada, and leader of the research team. While the data on  GRB 090423 don't indicate that it resulted from the death of such a  monster star, new astronomical tools are coming that may reveal them.

"The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), will allow us to pick out these very-distant GRBs more easily so we can target them for intense followup observations. The Expanded Very Large Array,  with much greater sensitivity than the current VLA, will let us follow  these blasts much longer and learn much more about their energies and  environments. We'll be able to look back even further in time," Frail  said. Both ALMA and the EVLA are scheduled for completion in 2012.

Chandra, Frail and Fox worked with Shrinivas Kulkarni of Caltech,  Edo Berger of Harvard University, S. Bradley Cenko of the University of  California at Berkeley, Douglas C.-J. Bock of the Combined Array for  Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy in California, and Fiona Harrison  and Mansi Kasliwal of Caltech. The scientists described their research  in a paper submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2009/grbz8/

评 论
附件下载:
相关新闻
Copyright © 2003-2009 中国科学院紫金山天文台青海观测站 版权所有 青ICP备06001436号
青海省德令哈市邮政局人民路支局26号信箱(天文台)817000
电话:09778221935 传真:09778224970