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user posted image rSubmitted by Bbrown88: How far can you see with your own eyes on a clear night? Would you believe seven billion light years? Early Wednesday morning, a spot of light just barely visible to the human eye (about fifth magnitude in astronomical parlance) appeared in the constellation Boötes. Astronomers say it was the toasted remains of one of the most titanic examples yet of the explosions known as gamma-ray bursts. News about the burst, in a galaxy seven billion light years away, began circulating by e-mail in the astronomical community when it was detected by NASA's Swift satellite on March 19.Gamma ray bursts are some of the most violent and enigmatic events in nature. Astronomers surmise that they might mark the implosion of a massive star into a black hole, or the collision of a pair of dense neutron stars. The visible glow from this burst, said Neil Gehrels of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, was 10 million times as bright as a supernova at that same distance. The universe is some 14 billion years old, which means that the news of this cataclysm has been on its way to us for half the age of the universe. Whatever stars went to their grave then have been dead since before the Sun and Earth were born.The burst, which has now been dubbed the “naked-eye burst” by astronomers, was one of four that day to be detected by Swift, which has been patrolling the heavens since 2004 for the invisible gamma rays streaming from these blasts and relaying information and precise coordinates to a worldwide network of observers and telescopes.

Dr. Gehrels said it was the most intense burst that Swift had yet seen. Alerted by Swift, a myriad of telescopes on the ground swung into action, some of them operating completely robotically, which as Dr. Gehrels noted, is convenient at an early morning hour. Among those recording and inspecting the burst was one of the giant eight-meter-diameter telescopes of the Very Large Telescope at the European Southern Observatory on Cerro Paranal, in Chile.

linked-image View: Full Article | Source: New York Times
Papaver
Interesting story. Good find.
ships-cat
That really is mind-boggling. The magnitude of an explosion such that it is visible billions of years later, and at such an incomprehensible distance.

Meow Purr. unsure.gif
questionmark
QUOTE (ships-cat @ Mar 25 2008, 02:02 PM) *
That really is mind-boggling. The magnitude of an explosion such that it is visible billions of years later, and at such an incomprehensible distance.

Meow Purr. unsure.gif


especially in kitty years!

good story.

Siara
QUOTE (ships-cat @ Mar 25 2008, 01:02 PM) *
That really is mind-boggling. The magnitude of an explosion such that it is visible billions of years later, and at such an incomprehensible distance.


It's hard to believe that I could relate in any way to such vastness. Mind-boggling is the word.
Bear's Quest
Remarkable!

Even before the sun and earth were born, the light has now reached us.
AntoniCanada
I can't explain why I was thinking of Planet X (coming soon to a planet near you 2012) while reading this article. There is another article on this site that says it is visible in the southern hem and since i couldn't connect and read the full article i wondering if it was related to this article?
tgan3
just woah man!!! Cool story...
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