Powerful and puzzling radio blasts
in other galaxies constantly explode across the night sky, a new study
suggests.
A team of international astronomers
has detected four explosive events, known as fast radio bursts (FRBs), above
the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy. Lasting only a few
thousandths of a second, these sources send powerful signals across the
universe, traveling billions of light-years through space.
"These bursts gave off more
energy in a millisecond than the sun does in 300,000 years," said
principal investigator Dan Thornton of the University of Manchester in England.
[Slideshow: History & Structure of the Universe
Explained]
Mysterious origins
Studying observations by the CSIRO
Parkes radio telescope in Australia, Thornton and his team spotted four new
point sources across the sky. The bursts ranged from 5.5 to 10 billion
light-years away, meaning it took the light from some of them 10 billion years
to reach Earth. (The Big Bang that created our universe
occurred 13.8 billion years ago.).
These newfound objects allowed the
researchers to calculate that an FRB should occur once every 10 seconds.
After the astronomers verified that
the objects weren't Earth-based, they questioned whether the new signals came
from inside or outside the Milky Way. To do so,
they studied how the radio waves were affected by the material they pass
through — a technique that could allow these new objects to shed light on the
components of space.
The positions of the newly detected
four Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are marked as red asterisks in this map of the
entire sky in galactic coordinates. The source of extragalactic radio signals
has baffled astronomers. Image released July 4, 2013.
As radio waves travel in space, they
are stretched and slowed by the ionized material through which they move. Using
models, the team concluded that the FRBs traveled billions of light-years —
much farther than the edge of Earth's galaxy.
"These are extragalactic in
origin — not from the Milky Way — but the source is likely located in another galaxy,"
Thornton said.
Although the explosions are brief,
the astronomers can pinpoint the bursts' locations pretty accurately.
"They are so bright and narrow
that we can limit the size of the emission region at the source to just a few
hundred kilometers," Thornton said.
No corresponding object could be
observed in optical, gamma or X-ray wavelengths, so the explosions' origins
remain unknown to scientists.
"Other variable extragalactic
radio sources vary on timescales of days to months," Thornton said.
"FRBs happen in just a few milliseconds."
Possible sources include intersecting
magnetic fields from two neutron stars, extremely dense city-size bodies
packing the mass of the sun. A special kind of supernova orbited by a neutron star
could potentially produce radio bursts as the star's magnetic field interacts
with the explosion of the supernova, though such combinations would be rare,
researchers said.
"Our favorite explanation is a
giant burst from a magnetar, a highly magnetized type of
neutron star," Thornton said.
These bursts of radiation can
produce an enormous amount of energy, similar to that seen in the FRBs.
Hard to spot
Although frequent, an FRB's short
signal duration makes it difficult to spot.
"The problem with searching for
FRBs is that we don't know where or when they will go off," Thornton said.
A single fast radio burst was detected in 2007,
leaving scientists puzzled about its source, and even its existence. For the
last four years, Thornton and his team have used the High Time Resolution
Survey to search for similar bursts. Powered by the 210-foot (64 meters) CSIRO
Parkes radio telescope, the survey was designed to search above and below the
plane of the Milky Way for objects such as rotating neutron stars known as
pulsars.
The Parkes telescope essentially
"stares" at a region of the sky for a set amount of time, making it
ideal to capture FRBs.
"At some point, one will go off
in the field of view of the telescope," Thornton said.
The four new sources appeared above
the plane of the galaxy. Follow-up observations, performed approximately a year
after the FRBs were first spotted, looked at whether the objects continued to
produce emission, but the signals appear to be nonrepeating.
"It is, of course, possible
that repetitions were missed, particularly if they happened soon after the
original FRB," Thornton said.
"Efforts are ongoing at the
moment to detect FRBs in close to real time, such that they can be followed up
quickly," he added. Ideally, such follow-up observations would be
performed at a multitude of wavelengths, providing further insight into what drives
these powerful explosions.
The research, along with a companion
Perspectives article by James Cordes of Cornell University in New York, was
published online Thursday (July 4) in the journal Science.
Originally published on SPACE.com.
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