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Rykster
user posted imageFlash from the Beginning of Time Reveals Strange Event
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
posted: 08 March 2006
01:00 pm ET


The most distant explosion ever recorded, signaling the birth of a black hole near the beginning of time, was more chaotic and lasted longer than astronomers would have expected.

The event was first reported last fall. Today scientists released new findings and an animation that depicts a strange sequence of events in which the explosion of a massive star first settles down but then fires back up several times toward the end.

Astronomers speculate that the black hole did not form instantly, as theory predicts, but that it was a prolonged process.

"This was a massive star that lived fast and died young," said David Burrows, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State and author of one of three papers in the March 9 issue of the journal Nature.

The burst, named GRB 050904, originated 12.8 billion light-years away, which means it occurred 12.8 billion years ago and the light took that long to reach us. It erupted very nearly at the beginning of time—the universe is about 13.7 billion years old.

Infant universe

The event provides the first glimpse of a star when the universe was in its infant stages. Until now, only entire galaxies had been observed so far away.

"Because the burst was brighter than a billion suns, many telescopes could study it even from such a huge distance," Burrows said.

The event was initially noted by NASA's orbiting Swift observatory as a gamma-ray burst that lasted more than 8 minutes. That burst of high-energy radiation was followed by afterglows in visible light and other wavelengths on the electromagnetic spectrum. Researchers have been examining the data ever since.

Astronomers know very little about the stars that formed back then, other than the presumption that they were made almost entirely of hydrogen and helium and a trace of lithium; other, heavier elements formed only when the first stars exploded.

Astronomers did find hints of heavier elements in GRB 050904, report a Japanese group led by Nobuyuki Kawai at the Tokyo Institute of Technology.

"We designed Swift to look for faint bursts coming from the edge of the universe," said Neil Gehrels of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Swift's principal investigator. "Now we've got one and it's fascinating. For the first time we can learn about individual stars from near the beginning of time. There are surely many more out there."

Primordial investigation

The flaring of GRB 050904 is something not typically seen in closer bursts. That means the earliest black holes might have formed differently than those being born today, Burrows said. The difference could be because the first stars were more massive, or perhaps it's just because the cosmic environment was different then.

In an analysis of the work, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton writes that the combined observations pave the way for the discovery of distant galaxies that are otherwise too dim to spot.

Gamma-ray bursts "will serve not only as signposts to such galaxies, but could be used to study the gradual build-up of heavy elements in them to determine the conversion history of primordial gas into stars, Ramirez-Ruiz writes. "And if bursts can be detected from a time before galaxies had gravitationally assembled, they might even provide a glimpse into the pregalactic phase of the universe."

Full Article With Animation: | Source: Space.com
frogfish
Nice...
Raptor
QUOTE
"This was a massive star that lived fast and died young," said David Burrows


A rock and roll star. Haha, get it? tongue.gif
>_>

Anyway, if black holes were formed differently, would they have behaved differently aswell?
Xenojjin
Astronomy has to be the most humiliating of all studies. Things like this keep coming up and revealing just how little we know about how a universe works.

So now black holes form by ...? Multi ? GAO ?


XP

Glacies
wow...that's awefully purdy! yes.gif
tom0407
wow, kinda blows your mind really w00t.gif
frogfish
Its a SGR!
Ancient World Wonders
If we were born from a giant black hole, would it stand to reason we will all be sucked back in one?
frogfish
QUOTE
If we were born from a giant black hole, would it stand to reason we will all be sucked back in one?

But we weren't
Rykster
QUOTE(Atlantis Rises @ Mar 13 2006, 10:08 PM) [snapback]1103413[/snapback]
If we were born from a giant black hole, would it stand to reason we will all be sucked back in one?
We are made up of the heavier elements created in these earlier stars. A portion of the star's mass is blown off into space and not incorpoated into the black hole. This mass that escapes, later forms new star systems that have the elements other than H and He.
ShaunZero
QUOTE(Xenojjin @ Mar 13 2006, 03:24 AM) [snapback]1101806[/snapback]

Astronomy has to be the most humiliating of all studies. Things like this keep coming up and revealing just how little we know about how a universe works.

So now black holes form by ...? Multi ? GAO ?
XP



Exactly. Our knowledge of the universe is extremely limited. Wich is why I don't buy into the age they gave the universe.
JeremyGTS
well if it was on the edge of the universe 12.8billion light years away and they estimate the universe is 13 something i think thats a little easier to believe than the bibles 6,000 years or so but thats just me
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