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Showing posts with the label gamma-ray bursts

Sub-photospheric shocks in relativistic explosions

Image: In the most common type of gamma-ray burst, illustrated here, a dying massive star forms a black hole (left), which drives a particle jet into space. Light across the spectrum arises from hot gas near the black hole, collisions within the jet, and from the jet's interaction with its surroundings. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Astrophysical explosions and jets generate shock waves, which produce radiation. Their radiative properties are determined by the dissipation mechanism that sustains the velocity jump in the shock and by its ability to generate nonthermal particles. A recent paper (Beloborodov 2016) examines the mechanism of internal shocks in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) that occur before the GRB jets become transparent to radiation. The approach and some of the results may also be of interest for other explosions, e.g. in novae or supernovae. Sub-photospheric shocks can produce neutrino emission and affect the observed photospheric radiation f...

Binary neutron star mergers: a jet engine for short gamma-ray burst

Picture: These images show the merger of two neutron stars simulated using a new supercomputer model. Redder colors indicate lower densities. Green and white ribbons and lines represent magnetic fields. The orbiting neutron stars rapidly lose energy by emitting gravitational waves and merge after about three orbits, or in less than 8 milliseconds. The merger amplifies and scrambles the merged magnetic field. A black hole forms and the magnetic field becomes more organized, eventually producing structures capable of supporting the jets that power short gamma-ray bursts. Credit: NASA/AEI/ZIB/M. Koppitz and L. Rezzolla The LIGO and Virgo Collaborations recently reported the first direct detection of a gravitational-wave (GW) signal and demonstrated that it was produced by the inspiral and coalescence of a binary black hole (BHBH) system.

Critical Test Of Gamma Ray Burst Theories

Image Credit: NASA/Dana Berry Long and precise follow-up measurements of the X-ray afterglow (AG) of very intense gamma ray bursts (GRBs) provide a critical test of GRB afterglow theories.

LONG GAMMA RAY BURSTS TO INVESTIGATE THE STAR FORMATION IN DARK MATTER HALOS

These two false-color images compare the distribution of normal matter (red, left) with dark matter (blue, right) in the universe. The brightness of clumps corresponds to the density of mass. The comparison will provide insight on how structure formed in the evolving universe under the relentless pull of gravity. Credit: NASA, ESA, CalTech Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most luminous explosive events in the cosmos, which can be detected even out to the edge of the Universe and they can be used to probe the properties of the high-z Universe, including high-z star formation history.