Gamma-Ray Bursting
Using graphics and data from NASA's
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory,
this animation illustrates one of the most
exciting mysteries of modern astrophysics,
gamma-ray bursts.
Incredibly
gamma-ray bursts, sudden flashes of radiation with over 100,000 times
the energy of visible light photons, occur several times a day.
They typically last from fractions of a second to many minutes
and appear from random directions,
unexpectedly triggering
space-based gamma-ray instruments.
At left a burst suddenly appears, flickers and fades in a
false-color gamma-ray all-sky map,
briefly overwhelming all other sources of
celestial gamma-rays.
The graph at right shows the corresponding response of
an orbiting gamma-ray detector as its
counting rate suddenly climbs and falls recording the passage
of the mysterious burst.
Originating far across the Universe,
gamma-ray bursts are now known to be the most
powerful explosions since the big bang
and may yet prove to be
useful tools for exploring
the distant cosmos.
Future space and
ground-based observatories
will also work to discover
the nature of the bursters
and the source of their
extreme energy.