Mysterious Extragalactic Explosions Baffle Astronomers | Fast Radio Bursts | Space.com - 0 views
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known as fast radio bursts (FRBs), above the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy.
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The bursts ranged from 5.5 to 10 billion light-years away, meaning it took the light from some of them 10 billion years to reach Earth. (The Big Bang
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These newfound objects allowed the researchers to calculate that an FRB should occur once every 10 seconds
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they studied how the radio waves were affected by the material they pass through — a technique that could allow these new objects to shed light on the components of space.
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As radio waves travel in space, they are stretched and slowed by the ionized material through which they move
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Using models, the team concluded that the FRBs traveled billions of light-years — much farther than the edge of Earth's galaxy
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They are so bright and narrow that we can limit the size of the emission region at the source to just a few hundred kilometers
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Although the explosions are brief, the astronomers can pinpoint the bursts' locations pretty accurately
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No corresponding object could be observed in optical, gamma or X-ray wavelengths, so the explosions' origins remain unknown to scientists
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intersecting magnetic fields from two neutron stars, extremely dense city-size bodies packing the mass of the sun.
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A special kind of supernova orbited by a neutron star could potentially produce radio bursts as the star's magnetic field interacts with the explosion of the supernova
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favorite explanation is a giant burst from a magnetar, a highly magnetized type of neutron star
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performed approximately a year after the FRBs were first spotted, looked at whether the objects continued to produce emission, but the signals appear to be nonrepeating
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Efforts are ongoing at the moment to detect FRBs in close to real time, such that they can be followed up quickly