Catching a burst's visible glow
By R. Cowen
When James Wren's beeper woke him just before 3 a.m. last Saturday, he knew
the routine. From his home computer, he checked that a robotically operated
telescope 8 kilometers away was recording images from the correct patch of sky.
Then Wren, an astronomer at the Los Alamos (N.M.) National Laboratory, went back
to sleep.
Little did he know that the event that made the telescope swing into action
was the most energetic cosmic eruption ever detected. Or that the telescope had
for the first time captured the visible glow of a gamma-ray burst while it was
still spewing high-energy radiation.
Although optical telescopes have recorded the glowing embers of some 12 bursts,
"this is the first time we've seen the counterpart of the fire," says
Bradley E. Schaefer of Yale University. Carl W. Akerlof and Timothy A. McKay of
the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor reported the find in a Jan. 23 circular
of the Gamma-Ray Burst Coordinates Network.
The optical observations, taken at Los Alamos with a telephoto-camera array
known as ROTSE-I (Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment I), owe their
success to an early warning network set up by Scott D. Barthelmy of NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. Whenever one of several satellites
detects a burst, the network instantly alerts ground-based telescopes to search
for a visible glow.
On Jan. 23, just 22 seconds after NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory found
a burst in the constellation Boötes, ROTSE-I began scanning the same region.
To the surprise of many astronomers, the glow spied by the telescope was so
bright that it could have been seen with a pair of binoculars.
Spectra reveal that the burst came from a galaxy some 9 billion light-years
away. At that distance, the intensity of the gamma-rays unleashed during the
100-second-long burst indicates that it was the most energetic ever recorded,
surpassing a burst dubbed the second Big Bang (SN: 5/9/98, p. 292). If the burst
emitted radiation equally in all directions, its total output equaled the
explosive energy of 2,000 supernovas.
The actual energy could be less. Stan E. Woosley of the University of
California, Santa Cruz has proposed that bursts are produced by asymmetric
explosions that beam their energy in one direction. One aimed at Earth could
appear 100 times more energetic than it is.
In addition, a cosmic mirage might have caused the Jan. 23 burst to appear
brighter, says S. George Djorgovski of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena. Either of two galaxies that apparently lie in front of the burst's
home galaxy could have acted as a gravitational lens, bending and focusing the
light. Such lenses can also create time-delayed images, raising the possibility
that new pictures of the burst may only appear after days or months.