Astronomers think a long GRB (gamma-ray burst) arises from a massive star when its core collapses, forming a black hole. In this artist's concept, particle jets powered by matter falling toward the black hole race outward at nearly the speed of light from a doomed star. To detect a GRB, one of these jets must point toward Earth. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
“I can still remember the excitement when gamma-ray bursts were discovered,” said Charles Meegan, a research scientist at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, who helped develop GRB detectors on NASA’s Compton and Fermi satellites. “I was a graduate student then, unaware that the study of these strange events would be my career for the next 50 years.”
The Hubble Space Telescope’s Wide Field Camera 3 revealed the infrared afterglow (circled) of the BOAT GRB and its host galaxy, seen nearly edge-on as a sliver of light extending from the afterglow's upper left. The burst occurred about 2 billion light-years away. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, A. Levan (Radboud University); Image Processing: Gladys Kobe
NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory drifts away from the space shuttle Atlantis on April 7, 1991, following its deployment during the STS-37 mission. Compton's successful career ended in June 2000 when the observatory re-entered Earth's atmosphere. Credit: NASA/Ken Cameron
Far-Flung Flare-Ups
Even half a century on, GRBs offer up surprises. One recent burst was so bright it temporarily blinded most of the gamma-ray detectors in space. Nicknamed the BOAT (for brightest of all time), the 7-minute blast may have been the brightest GRB in the past 10,000 years. It also showed that scientists’ most promising models of these events are nowhere near complete.
Nuke Watchers
Launched in pairs, the Vela satellites carried detectors designed to sense the initial flash of X-rays and gamma rays from nuclear explosions. Sometimes they triggered on events that clearly were not nuclear tests, and scientists collected and studied these observations. With improved instruments on the four Vela 5 and 6 satellites, Ray Klebesadel at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, together with his colleagues Ian Strong and Roy Olsen, determined directions to 16 confirmed gamma-ray events well enough to rule out Earth and the Sun as sources. They published a paper announcing the discovery in The Astrophysical Journal on June 1, 1973.
Using a detector aboard the IMP 6 satellite intended to study solar flares, Tom Cline and Upendra Desai at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, quickly confirmed the Vela findings.
Breakthroughs: BATSE & BeppoSAX
In 1991, NASA launched the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, which included an instrument named BATSE (Burst and Transient Science Experiment) dedicated to exploring GRBs. Developed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, by a team that included Meegan, BATSE was about 10 times more sensitive than previous GRB detectors. Over Compton’s nine-year mission, BATSE detected 2,704 bursts, which gave astronomers a rich set of observations made with the same instrument.
In its first year, BATSE data showed that bursts were distributed all over the sky instead of in a pattern that reflected the structure of our Milky Way galaxy. “This suggested that they were coming from distant galaxies, and that meant they were more energetic than most scientists thought possible,” Meegan said.
Around the same time, Chryssa Kouveliotou, another member of the BATSE team, led an effort to classify the bursts. The team found that burst durations clustered into two broad groups – one lasting less than two seconds, the other lasting longer than two seconds – and that short bursts produced higher-energy gamma rays than long ones.
“So both temporal and spectral properties agreed in identifying two separate groups of GRBs: short and long,” said Kouveliotou, who now chairs the department of physics at George Washington University. “Soon after, theorists associated long GRBs with the collapse of massive stars and short ones with binary neutron star mergers.”
The next step in understanding came with watershed observations from the Italian-Dutch satellite BeppoSAX. Although not specifically designed as a GRB mission, its mix of instruments – including a gamma-ray monitor and two wide-field X-ray cameras – proved a boon to the field.
When a burst occurred in the field of view of one of the X-ray cameras, the spacecraft could locate it well enough over a couple of hours that additional instruments could be brought to bear. Whenever BeppoSAX turned to a GRB’s position, its instruments found a rapidly fading and previously unknown high-energy source – the X-ray afterglow theorists had predicted. These positions enabled large ground-based observatories to discover long GRB afterglows in visible light and radio waves, and also permitted the first distance measurements, confirming that GRBs were truly far-away events.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (KBRwyle)
Need for Speed
What took BeppoSAX a couple of hours, NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift
Observatory, launched in 2004, can do in about a minute. “We named it
Swift for a reason,” said Goddard’s S. Bradley Cenko, the mission’s
current principal investigator. “Its rapid, automated response allowed
us to detect flares and other features in X-ray afterglows not
previously seen.”
Following up on GRBs detected by these missions confirmed that long
bursts were associated with the star-forming regions of galaxies and
were often accompanied by supernovae. In May 2005, Swift was able to pinpoint the first afterglow of a short GRB,
showing that these blasts occur in regions with little star formation.
This bolstered the model of short bursts as mergers of neutron stars,
which can travel far from their birth place over the many millions of
years it takes for them to crash together.
In 2008, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope joined Swift in
hunting GRBs and has observed about 3,500 to date. Its GBM (Gamma-ray
Burst Monitor) and Large Area Telescope allow the detection and
follow-up of bursts from X-rays to the highest-energy gamma rays
detected in space – an energy span of 100 million times. This has
enabled the discovery of afterglow gamma rays with billions of times the
energy of visible light.
In this artist's concept, pale concentric arcs illustrate gravitational waves produced as orbiting neutron stars merged. The event also formed near-light-speed particle jets that emitted gamma rays. In 2017, both signals were detected from the same source for the first time. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/CI Lab
“We’re building new satellites with greater sensitivity to delve more deeply into this phenomenon, so the future of GRB science is bright,” said Marshall’s Dan Kocevski, a member of the Fermi GBM team and the principal investigator for StarBurst, a small satellite designed to explore GRBs from neutron star mergers. Other missions include Glowbug, part of an experiment package launched to the International Space Station in March and led by J. Eric Grove at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory in Washington; BurstCube, led by Goddard’s Jeremy Perkins and slated for launch in early 2024; MoonBEAM, which would orbit between Earth and the Moon and is led by Marshall’s Chiumun Michelle Hui; and LEAP, designed to study GRB jets from the space station, led by Mark McConnell at the University of New Hampshire, Durham.
And as gravitational and gamma-ray facilities both improve their reach, a new chapter of the GRB story will open.
By Francis Reddy
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Media Contact:
Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(301) 286-1940
Editor: Francis Reddy