-- 
-Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have -
-happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ
-Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all-
-individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question?
steveo at syslang.net

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2003 17:41:47 -0800
From: Jon Callas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: The Eristocracy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Birth of a Black Hole witnessed

From: Tamzen Cannoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2003 17:08:32 -0800
Subject: Birth of a Black Hole witnessed

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&articleID=0005A5FA-0A9E-1E79-A
98A809EC5880105

March 20, 2003
A Gamma-Ray Burst, in Detail

Just like ET before it, NASA's High Energy Transient Explorer (HETE)
satellite phoned home. As a result, astronomers were able to get the
most detailed pictures yet of a gamma-ray burst and the evolution of
its afterglow.  In a report published today in the journal Nature,
researchers describe a gamma-ray burst known as GRB021004 and note
that it was 10 to 100 times more powerful than they expected.

Gamma-ray bursts typically last less than a hundred seconds, and much
of the information gathered about them so far has relied on data from
afterglows, which are lower-energy forms of light that can linger for
days or weeks following the events. But after HETE relayed news of
GRB021004, a telescope in Japan was collecting information from it in
less than four minutes. Over the next few days, scientists focused
more than 50 telescopes around the world on GRB021004. "If a gamma
ray burst is the birth cry of a black hole, then the HETE satellite
has just allowed us into the delivery room," says Derek Fox of the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., and the lead
author of the report.

The quick response allowed the astronomers to witness both the demise
of the gamma-ray signal and the start of the afterglow signal.
Surprisingly, they found that in the first half hour of its
existence, the afterglow actually gained energy. "Gamma-ray bursts
must be many times more powerful than we previously thought," notes
George Ricker of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The
authors say their findings support the so-called collapsar model for
gamma-ray bursts, which posits that the explosions result from stars
that are collapsing to form black holes. In this scenario, the star
that led to GRB021004 would have been 15 times as massive as our sun.
Comments Anne Kinney of NASA, "This stunning observation places us in
the fiery throes of a star explosion, peering through the debris at a
newly formed black hole within." -- Sarah Graham


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