Breakthrough Study Confirms Cause Of Short Gamma-Ray Bursts

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April 7, 2011

Trent Perrotto 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-0321 
trent.j.perrotto@xxxxxxxx 

Lynn Chandler 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-2806 
lynn.chandler-1@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 11-103

BREAKTHROUGH STUDY CONFIRMS CAUSE OF SHORT GAMMA-RAY BURSTS

WASHINGTON -- A new supercomputer simulation shows the collision of 
two neutron stars can naturally produce the magnetic structures 
thought to power the high-speed particle jets associated with short 
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). The study provides the most detailed glimpse 
of the forces driving some of the universe's most energetic 
explosions. 

The state-of-the-art simulation ran for nearly seven weeks on the 
Damiana computer cluster at the Albert Einstein Institute (AEI) in 
Potsdam, Germany. It traces events that unfold over 35 milliseconds 
-- about three times faster than the blink of an eye. 

GRBs are among the brightest events known, emitting as much energy in 
a few seconds as our entire galaxy does in a year. Most of this 
emission comes in the form of gamma rays, the highest-energy form of 
light. 

"For the first time, we've managed to run the simulation well past the 
merger and the formation of the black hole," said Chryssa 
Kouveliotou, a co-author of the study at NASA's Marshall Space Flight 
Center in Huntsville, Ala. "This is by far the longest simulation of 
this process, and only on sufficiently long timescales does the 
magnetic field grow and reorganize itself from a chaotic structure 
into something resembling a jet." 

GRBs longer than two seconds are the most common type and are widely 
thought to be triggered by the collapse of a massive star into a 
black hole. As matter falls toward the black hole, some of it forms 
jets in the opposite direction that move near the speed of light. 
These jets bore through the collapsing star along its rotational axis 
and produce a blast of gamma rays after they emerge. Understanding 
short GRBs, which fade quickly, proved more elusive. Astronomers had 
difficulty obtaining precise positions for follow-up studies. 

That began to change in 2004, when NASA's Swift satellite began 
rapidly locating bursts and alerting astronomers where to look. 

"For more than two decades, the leading model of short GRBs was the 
merger of two neutron stars," said co-author Bruno Giacomazzo at the 
University of Maryland and NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md. "Only now can we show that the merger of neutron stars 
actually produces an ultrastrong magnetic field structured like the 
jets needed for a GRB." 

A neutron star is the compressed core left behind when a star weighing 
less than about 30 times the sun's mass explodes as a supernova. Its 
matter reaches densities that cannot be reproduced on Earth -- a 
single spoonful outweighs the Himalayan Mountains. 

The simulation began with a pair of magnetized neutron stars orbiting 
just 11 miles apart. Each star packed 1.5 times the mass of the sun 
into a sphere just 17 miles across and generated a magnetic field 
about a trillion times stronger than the sun's. 

In 15 milliseconds, the two neutron stars crashed, merged and 
transformed into a rapidly spinning black hole weighing 2.9 suns. The 
edge of the black hole, known as its event horizon, spanned less than 
six miles. A swirling chaos of superdense matter with temperatures 
exceeding 18 billion degrees Fahrenheit surrounded the newborn black 
hole. The merger amplified the strength of the combined magnetic 
field, but it also scrambled it into disarray. 

Over the next 11 milliseconds, gas swirling close to the speed of 
light continued to amplify the magnetic field, which ultimately 
became a thousand times stronger than the neutron stars' original 
fields. At the same time, the field became more organized and 
gradually formed a pair of outwardly directed funnels along the black 
hole's rotational axis. 

This is exactly the configuration needed to power the jets of 
ultrafast particles that produce a short gamma-ray burst. Neither of 
the magnetic funnels was filled with high-speed matter when the 
simulation ended, but earlier studies have shown that jet formation 
can occur under these conditions. 

"By solving Einstein's relativity equations as never before and 
letting nature take its course, we've lifted the veil on short GRBs 
and revealed what could be their central engine," said Luciano 
Rezzolla, the study's lead author at AEI. "This is a long-awaited 
result. Now it appears that neutron star mergers inevitably produce 
aligned jet-like structures in an ultrastrong magnetic field." 

The study is available online and will appear in the May 1 edition of 
The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 

The authors note the ultimate proof of the merger model will have to 
await the detection of gravitational waves -- ripples in the fabric 
of space-time predicted by relativity. Merging neutron stars are 
expected to be prominent sources, so the researchers also computed 
what the model's gravitational-wave signal would look like. 
Observatories around the world are searching for gravitational waves, 
so far without success because the signals are so faint. 

For more information, video and images associated with this release, 
visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/features/gamma-ray-engines.html 

	
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