European Space Agency  XMM-Newtown observatory
European Space Agency XMM-Newtown observatory

Blinded by the light: gamma ray burst brighter than any seen before

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Not peer-reviewed: This work has not been scrutinised by independent experts, or the story does not contain research data to review (for example an opinion piece). If you are reporting on research that has yet to go through peer-review (eg. conference abstracts and preprints) be aware that the findings can change during the peer review process.

An Australian team has provided rapid radio-wave follow-up observation of the brightest gamma ray burst ever witnessed - likely caused by a massive star collapsing 1.9 billion light years away.

Journal/conference: arXiv and The Astrophysical Journal Letters

Organisation/s: The University of Sydney, CSIRO, ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGRav), Curtin University

Funder: The authors declare no conflicts of interest. This scientific work uses data obtained from Inyarrimanha Ilgari Bundara, the CSIRO Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory. We acknowledge the Wajarri Yamaji People as the Traditional Owners and native title holders of the Observatory site. The ASKAP radio telescope is part of the Australia Telescope National Facility managed by CSIRO. Operation of ASKAP is funded by the Australian Government with support from the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy.

Media release

From: The University of Sydney

Australian astronomers have provided vital information in the global effort to understand the brightest-ever detected gamma ray burst, which swept through our Solar System on 9 October last year.

Detailed findings of that explosion from another galaxy 1.9 billion light years away were published today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

PhD student James Leung from the University of Sydney said: “The exceptional brightness of this gamma-ray burst meant astronomers were able to study it in unprecedented detail in real-time as the light arrived from that distant galaxy.

“This gave us a golden opportunity to test intricate physical models that describe what happens before, during and after the death of a star.”

Mr Leung is co-author of a complementary study published on the online arXiv.

Scientists believe gamma ray bursts – the biggest known explosions in the Universe – are the death throes of enormous stars as they collapse into black holes, emitting enormous amounts of energy in opposite directions as gamma rays and X-rays.

At the time of its detection last year, the gamma ray burst GRB 221009A was dubbed as BOAT – the brightest of all time.

“While that’s a bit of an exaggeration, GRB 221009A was likely the brightest burst at X-ray and gamma-ray energies to occur since human civilisation began,” said Assistant Professor Eric Burns at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and co‑author of The Astrophysical Journal Letters study.

The burst was so bright it blinded most gamma-ray instruments in space, which meant they could not measure the real intensity of the emission.

Astronomers believe it to be a one in 10,000-year event. And while the energy from this gamma ray burst was not unusually large, the jets of energy were exceptionally narrow with one pointed directly at Earth, making it appear exceptionally bright.

Working with scientists from the University of Oxford, the University of Sydney and the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), the astronomers provided vital and rapid follow-up observation of the cosmic event in the radio wave part of the electromagnetic (light) spectrum.

This supported work by US astronomers piecing together missing data in shorter wavelengths (X-ray and gamma ray) using NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and data collected from Russian and Chinese teams. Together they showed the burst was 70 times brighter than any seen before.

University of Sydney scientists provided follow-up observation of the gamma ray burst using the CSIRO ASKAP telescope in Western Australia, detecting the effects of the dramatic emission of energy at longer radio wavelengths.

Professor Tara Murphy, Head of the School of Physics at the University of Sydney and co-author on the Oxford University-led radio astronomy research, said: “One of the fascinating things about gamma ray bursts is, although they are over quite quickly – in just a matter of seconds – they leave afterglow emissions across the light spectrum in surrounding matter that echo for months and years afterwards.”

Co-author and Sydney PhD student James Leung said: “This afterglow is produced by a forward shock from the material ejected by the gamma-ray burst and a reverse shock reflected backwards into the ejected material. This gives us further opportunities to observe these fascinating, powerful events.”

Their observations showed a rapid, early brightening from the source of the event caused by the reverse shock of the gamma ray burst. This revealed evidence in radio waves that is difficult to explain within current theoretical explanations of gamma ray bursts.

Mr Leung said: “Our observations provide unmatched insights into the reverse shock model for gamma-ray burst emission, showing it is very difficult for existing models to replicate the slow evolution of the energy peaks that we observed.

“This means we have to refine and develop new theoretical models to understand these most extreme explosions in the Universe.”

This detective work will help astronomers quickly pinpoint future gamma ray bursts, perhaps assisting in the discovery of predicted supernovae associated with the events.

Co-author of the Oxford-led study, Dr Gemma Anderson (ICRAR-Curtin University), said: “The most interesting part of a cosmic explosion is the very beginning as the explosion expels material that is moving at nearly the speed of light. We therefore want the radio telescopes to be on target and observing GRBs as quickly as possible so that we can detect the very earliest radio light they emit."

With this type of GRB, astronomers expect to find a brightening supernova a few weeks later, but so far it has proven elusive.

No gamma ray burst has so far been detected in our own galaxy, the Milky Way. It has been predicted that if such an enormous explosion were to happen relatively close to Earth – and pointed in our direction – the gamma ray burst could knock out electronics or, at worst, strip Earth of its atmosphere leading to mass extinctions.

DOWNLOAD animations, photos and other material at this link.

INTERVIEWS

Mr James Leung | jleu9465@uni.sydney.edu.au

Professor Tara Murphy | tara.murphy@sydney.edu.au

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Multimedia:

  • Animation of collapsing star causing gamma ray burst

    When a massive star runs out of fuel, its core suddenly collapses and forms a black hole. As matter swirls toward the black hole, some of it escapes in the form of two powerful jets that rush outward at almost the speed of light in opposite directions. Typically jets from collapsing stars produce gamma rays for many seconds to minutes.

    File Size: 2.7 MB

    Attribution: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (KBRwyle)

    Permission Category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last Modified: 30 Mar 2023 12:17am

    Note: High resolution video files are only available for download here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • PhD student and co-author James Leung
    PhD student and co-author James Leung

    PhD student and co-author James Leung from the School of Physics at the University of Sydney.

    File size: 145.5 KB

    Attribution:

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 29 Mar 2023 6:18am

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  • How a gamma ray burst forms
    How a gamma ray burst forms

    The core of a massive star (left) has collapsed, forming a black hole that sends a jet of particles moving through the collapsing star and out into space at nearly the speed of light. Radiation across the spectrum arises from hot ionised gas (plasma) in the vicinity of the newborn black hole, collisions among shells of fast-moving gas within the jet (internal shock waves), and from the leading edge of the jet as it sweeps up and interacts with its surroundings (external shock).

    File size: 306.0 KB

    Attribution: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 30 Mar 2023 12:36am

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  • Rings of gamma ray burst GRB221009A
    Rings of gamma ray burst GRB221009A

    XMM-Newton images recorded 20 dust rings, 19 of which are shown here in arbitrary colours. The image merges observations made two and five days after GRB 221009A erupted. Dark stripes indicate gaps between the detectors. GRB221009A is only the seventh gamma-ray burst to display X-ray rings, and it triples the number previously seen around one.

    File size: 5.9 MB

    Attribution: ESA/XMM-Newton/M. Rigoselli (INAF)

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 30 Mar 2023 12:02am

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  • Location of GRB221009A gif
    Location of GRB221009A gif

    GRB 221009A appeared in the constellation Sagitta, within the dust-rich central plane of our galaxy. The bright star at upper left is Vega.

    File size: 1.4 MB

    Attribution: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 30 Mar 2023 12:22am

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