Secrets of Ancient Radiation Burst Caused by Dying Star Probed by Scientists

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Galaxy - Sputnik International, 1920, 27.07.2021
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Originally detected by NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope last year, the signal only lasts about 0.65 seconds.
Scientists have managed to gain new insight into the nature of a pulse of high-energy radiation known as a gamma-ray burst (GRB) that's been aimed at our planet “for nearly half the present age of the universe,” SciTechDaily reports.
The signal, coined GRB 200826A, was originally detected in August 2020 by NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and, according to the media outlet, turned out to be the shortest GRB “caused by the death of a massive star” ever seen.
"We already knew some GRBs from massive stars could register as short GRBs, but we thought this was due to instrumental limitations," said Bin-Bin Zhang from Nanjing University in China and the University of Nevada, who is the lead of a new study that delves into the gamma-ray data of the burst in question.
Zhang also remarked that what makes GRB 200826A special is the fact that "it is definitely a short-duration GRB, but its other properties point to its origin from a collapsing star."
"Now we know dying stars can produce short bursts, too," Zhang added.
Artist’s impression of a fast radio burst FRB 181112 traveling through space and reaching Earth. - Sputnik International, 1920, 21.05.2021
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Another new study, led by a doctoral student at the University of Maryland and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Centre named Tomas Ahumada, focused instead on the GRB’s afterglow and the "emerging light of the supernova explosion that followed."
"We think this event was effectively a fizzle, one that was close to not happening at all," Ahumada said. "Even so, the burst emitted 14 million times the energy released by the entire Milky Way galaxy over the same amount of time, making it one of the most energetic short-duration GRBs ever seen."
With GRB 200826A lasting only about 0.65 seconds, researchers established that it takes its light about 6.6 billion years to reach us, which amounts to nearly half the current age of the universe.
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