4 July 2008
Romanian surgeon in big trouble for cutting off his patient's penis
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA 
Photo Forum Articles News All news Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
USA concerned about Russia’s interest in uranium-rich Mongolia   Russia to launch Cyrillic domains next year   Tunguska explosion still unraveled 100 years after
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Photo galleries
Bora Bora Island: Probably one of world's most beautiful places
Bora Bora Island: Probably one of world's most beautiful places
Macho men take the catwalk Miss Bikini trophy goes to Miss Mexico

LATEST NEWS
Toshiba establishes new standard – DVD Download
AMD expands its market share at Intel’s expense
Macs to be promoted in corporate environments managed with Microsoft Windows
Google and Yahoo to search Adobe's SWF files
Google Media Server connects PCs to TVs
Sony to launch something like Apple's iTunes for PlayStation 3
Cocoa genome to be identified in five years
Outbreaks of E. coli bacteria in Michigan and Ohio linked
Panasonic brings yet another idea for life
FDA takes extra time to approve new blood-thinner


NEWS OF THE WEEK
Tunguska meteorite was probably not a meteorite at all
America needs America to care about Americans
Relations between Russia and USA get into Cold War spirit again

Article

NASA scientists solve mystery of powerful gamma ray bursts

06.10.2005 Source:
Increase font size
  Decrease font size   print version  
Pages:

NASA scientists have solved the mystery of the origin of gamma ray bursts, the most powerful explosions known in space.

The bursts are split-second flashes, brighter than a billion suns that have been too fast for scientists to catch. But researchers at National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) unveiled that they occur when a black hole collides with a neutron star, or as the result of the collisions between two neutron stars.

BREAKING NEWS
Raging Earth tries to destroy humans with immense power
Happy Birthday, America!
Russia vs. USA: Who wins the space exploration race?
Top 5 abstract satellite photos of rivers
More...

"Gamma-ray bursts in general are notoriously difficult to study, but the shortest ones have been next to impossible to pin down," said Neil Gehrels, the lead investigator of NASA's Swift satellite.

"All that has changed. We now have the tools in place to study these events," he said.

The satellite detected a burst in May and NASA's High-Energy Transit Explorer detected another in July. Based on these findings, the theory was developed. The findings will be published in the October 6 issue of Nature magazine.

NASA said the new discoveries could help scientist detect gravitational waves ripples in space time that have never been seen.

"Short gamma-ray bursts could tell scientists when and where to look for the ripples," a NASA statement said.

More than 130 scientists are in the project, the agency said, reports Hindustan Times.

The explosions are called gamma-ray bursts, or GRBs. Several are recorded every day, coming from all directions of the sky.

Most originate in the very distant universe. One nearby could trigger a mass extinction on Earth.

Gamma rays are the most intense form of radiation, more powerful than X-rays. The afterglow of a single burst, measured in X-rays, radio waves and other wavelengths, can be billions of times brighter than the entire galaxy in which it originates.

Long-duration GRBs typically last about 20 seconds. Previous studies revealed one of these is released when the core of a young and very massive star collapses in a supernova event.

"Gamma-ray bursts in general are notoriously difficult to study, but the shortest ones have been next to impossible to pin down," said Neil Gehrels of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. "All that has changed. We now have the tools in place to study these events," informs USA Today.

Photo: NASA official site P.T.

Join Pravda.ru forum. Registration is free and simple

Digg!
Pages:
print version e-mail


Readers' Top
Miss Universe contestants posing in their bikinis
Most beautiful castles in the world
Russia finally loses space race to USA



FUNNY NEWS STORIES :
All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2006. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100 Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru