
This orange dot is a gamma-ray burst that appears to be an indication of an uncommon occasion
ESO/A. Levan, A. Martin-Carrillo et al.
A black gap that was eaten by a star appears to have gotten revenge by consuming the star from the within, producing a gamma-ray burst noticed about 9 billion light-years from Earth.
The burst, known as GRB 250702B, was first noticed by NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray House Telescope in July. Such bursts are vibrant flashes attributable to jets fired out from energetic occasions, reminiscent of huge stars collapsing into black holes or neutron stars merging, they usually often final no various minutes.
GRB 250702B, nonetheless, lasted for 25,000 seconds – or about 7 hours – making it the longest-known gamma-ray burst. Scientists had struggled to clarify it, however Eliza Neights at NASA’s Goddard House Flight Centre within the US and her colleagues now counsel an uncommon and uncommon risk.
“The one [model] which naturally explains the properties noticed in GRB 250702B is the autumn of a stellar-mass black gap right into a star,” the researchers write in a paper about their work.
In additional-typical lengthy gamma-ray bursts, a large star collapses to kind a black gap, launching jets because it dies. On this case, the workforce suggests the reverse – a pre-existing black gap spiralled right into a companion star whose outer layers had expanded late in its life, inflicting the black gap to lose angular momentum and fall in direction of the star’s core.
The black gap would then have consumed the star from the inside-out, producing the highly effective jets seen as GRB 250702B and presumably triggering a faint supernova, albeit one which was too dim to detect at this distance, even with the James Webb House Telescope.
This rationalization is smart for a way an ultra-long burst like this may happen, says Hendrik van Eerten on the College of Bathtub within the UK. “The argument posed on this paper is a really compelling one,” he says.
Neights and her colleagues hope that extra occasions like this may be noticed sooner or later, thanks to approaching telescopes just like the Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile. For now, this gamma ray burst stays “an absurdity”, says Van Eerten.
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