martes, 28 de abril de 2009

Farthest Known Object: New Gamma-Ray Burst Smashes Cosmic Distance Record

En cuanto tenga tiempo traduzco el artículo, o lo que pueda. Entretanto, coged un diccionario.

En resumen se dice que un grupo de Astrónomos han descubierto el objeto más distante del Universo: una explosión estelar espectacular en forma de chorro de rayos gamma localizado a unos 13 mil millones de años luz.

Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, along with colleagues elsewhere in the United States and the United Kingdom, have discovered the most distant object in the universe -- a spectacular stellar explosion known as a gamma-ray burst located about 13 billion light years away. (Recordemos que para los americanos un billon de años es igual a 1000 millones de los europeos, cosa de los egos)


La explosión, denominada GRB 090423, fue detectada por el satélite Swift de la NASA el 23 de abril 2009 y fue observado por los equipos de EE.UU. y el Reino Unido en cuestión de minutos de su descubrimiento. Las observaciones demostraron que la explosión "récord" se produjo cuando el Universo tenía sólo 630 millones de años, sólo una vigésima parte de su actual edad.
The burst, dubbed GRB 090423, was detected by NASA's Swift satellite on 2009 April 23 and was observed by the US and UK team within minutes of its discovery. The observations demonstrated that the record-breaking explosion occurred when the universe was only 630 million years old, a mere one-twentieth of its current age.
"I have been chasing gamma-ray bursts for a decade, trying to find such a spectacular event," said Edo Berger, a professor at Harvard University and a leading member of the team that first demonstrated the burst's origin.
"We now have the first direct proof that the young universe was teeming with exploding stars and newly-born black holes only a few hundred million years after the Big Bang," he added.
At 3:55 a.m. EDT on April 23, the Swift satellite detected a ten-second-long gamma-ray burst of modest brightness. It quickly pivoted to bring its Ultraviolet/Optical and X-Ray telescopes to bear on the burst location. Swift saw a fading X-ray afterglow but none in visible light.
"That alone suggested this could be a very distant object," explained Berger. Beyond a certain distance, the expansion of the universe shifts all optical emission into longer infrared wavelengths. While a star's ultraviolet light could be similarly shifted into the visible region, UV-absorbing hydrogen gas grows thicker at earlier times. "If you look far enough away, you can't see visible light from any object," he noted.
"The burst most likely arose from the explosion of a massive star," said Derek Fox at Penn State University. "We're seeing the demise of a star - and probably the birth of a black hole - in one of the universe's earliest stellar generations."
Within three hours of the burst, Nial Tanvir at the University of Leicester, U.K., and his colleagues detected an infrared source at the Swift position using the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. "Burst afterglows provide us with the most information about the exploded star and its environs," Tanvir said. "But because afterglows fade out so fast, we must target them quickly."
At the same time, Berger and Fox led an effort to obtain infrared images of the afterglow using the Gemini North Telescope on Mauna Kea. The source appeared in longer-wavelength images, but was absent in an image taken at the shortest wavelength (1 micron). This "drop out" corresponded to a distance of about 13 billion light-years.
As word spread about the record distance, additional telescopes around the world slewed toward GRB 090423 to observe the afterglow before it faded away. By dissecting the infrared light of the afterglow into a spectrum, astronomers confirmed the burst's redshift to be 8.2 -- the highest ever measured. This corresponds to a distance of 13.035 billion light-years.



The previous record holder was a burst seen in September 2008. It showed a redshift of 6.7, which places it 190 million light-years closer than GRB 090423.
"This new gamma-ray burst smashed all the records," noted Berger. "It easily surpassed the most distant galaxies and quasars. In fact, it showed that we can use these spectacular events to pinpoint the first generation of stars and galaxies."
Gamma-ray bursts are the universe's most luminous explosions. Most occur when massive stars run out of nuclear fuel. As their cores collapse into a black hole or neutron star, gas jets - driven by processes not fully understood - punch through the star and blast into space. There, they strike gas previously shed by the star and heat it, which generates short-lived afterglows in other wavelengths.
This release is being issued jointly with NASA.
Swift is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. It was built and is being operated in collaboration with Penn State University, University Park, Pa., the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, and General Dynamics of Gilbert, Ariz., in the U.S. International collaborators include the University of Leicester and Mullard Space Sciences Laboratory in the United Kingdom, Brera Observatory and the Italian Space Agency in Italy, and additional partners in Germany and Japan.Headquartered in Cambridge, Mass., the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) is a joint collaboration between the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and the Harvard College Observatory. CfA scientists, organized into six research divisions, study the origin, evolution and ultimate fate of the universe.


Artículo publicado en PORTAL AL UNIVERSO

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