Astronomers
studying archival observations of powerful explosions called short gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs) have detected light patterns indicating the brief existence of a
superheavy neutron star shortly before it collapsed into a black hole. This
fleeting, massive object likely formed from the collision of two neutron stars.
“We looked for these signals in 700 short
GRBs detected with NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, Fermi
Gamma-ray Space Telescope,
and the Compton Gamma
Ray Observatory,”
explained Cecilia Chirenti, a researcher at the University of Maryland, College
Park (UMCP) and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, who
presented the findings at the 241st meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Seattle. “We found these gamma-ray patterns
in two bursts observed by Compton in the early 1990s.”
This simulation tracks the gravitational wave and density changes as two
orbiting neutron stars crash together. Dark purple colors represent the lowest
densities, while yellow-white shows the highest. An audible tone and a visual
frequency scale (at left) track the steady rise in the frequency of
gravitational waves as the neutron stars close. When the objects merge at 42
seconds, the gravitational waves suddenly jump to frequencies of thousands of
hertz and bounce between two primary tones (quasiperiodic oscillations, or
QPOs). The presence of these signals in such simulations led to the search and
discovery of similar phenomena in the light emitted by short gamma-ray bursts.
Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and STAG Research Centre/Peter
Hammond
Download high-resolution video and images from NASA’s
Scientific Visualization Studio
A paper describing the results, led by Chirenti, was published Monday, Jan.
9, in the scientific journal Nature.
A neutron star forms when the core of a massive star runs out
of fuel and collapses. This produces a shock wave that blows away the rest of
the star in a supernova explosion. Neutron stars typically pack more mass than
our Sun into a ball about the size of a city, but above a certain mass, they
must collapse into black holes.
Astronauts imaged the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory during its deployment
from space shuttle Atlantis in April 1991. Credit: NASA/STS-37 crew
Both the Compton data and computer simulations revealed mega neutron stars tipping the scales by 20% more than the most massive, precisely measured neutron star known – dubbed J0740+6620 – which weighs in at nearly 2.1 times the Sun’s mass. Superheavy neutron stars also have nearly twice the size of a typical neutron star, or about twice the length of Manhattan Island.
The mega neutron stars spin nearly 78,000
times a minute – almost twice the speed of J1748–2446ad, the fastest pulsar on
record. This rapid rotation briefly supports the objects against further
collapse, allowing them to exist for just a few tenths of a second, after which
they proceed to form a black hole faster than the blink of an eye.
“We know that short GRBs form when
orbiting neutron stars crash together, and we know they eventually collapse
into a black hole, but the precise sequence of events is not well understood,”
said Cole Miller, a professor of astronomy at UMCP and a co-author of the
paper. “At some point, the nascent black hole erupts with a jet of fast-moving
particles that emits an intense flash of gamma rays, the highest-energy form of
light, and we want to learn more about how that develops.”
Short GRBs typically shine for less than
two seconds yet unleash energy comparable to what’s released by all the stars
in our galaxy over one year. They can be detected more than a billion
light-years away. Merging neutron stars also produce gravitational waves,
ripples in space-time that can be detected by a growing number of ground-based
observatories.
Computer simulations of these mergers show
that gravitational waves exhibit a sudden jump in frequency – exceeding 1,000
hertz – as the neutron stars coalesce. These signals are too fast and faint for
existing gravitational wave observatories to detect. But Chirenti and her team
reasoned that similar signals could appear in the gamma-ray emission from short
GRBs.
Astronomers call these signals quasiperiodic oscillations, or QPOs for short. Unlike, say, the steady ringing of a tuning fork, QPOs can be composed of several close frequencies that vary or dissipate over time. Both the gamma-ray and gravitational wave QPOs originate in the maelstrom of swirling matter as the two neutron stars coalesce.
In this animation, a neutron star (blue sphere) spins in the center of a colorful disk of gas, some of which follows the magnetic field (blue lines) and flows (blue-white arcs) onto the object’s surface. One interpretation of the quasiperiodic oscillations seen in X-rays in these systems is the formation of a hot spot (white oval) near the disk's inner edge, which expands and contracts as its properties change. Because of this irregular orbit, the hot spot emission varies within a range of frequencies. Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
While no gamma-ray QPOs materialized in the Swift and Fermi bursts, two short GRBs recorded by Compton’s Burst And Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) on July 11, 1991, and Nov. 1, 1993, fit the bill.
The larger area of the BATSE instrument
gave it the upper hand in finding these faint patterns – the tell-tale
flickering that revealed the presence of mega neutron stars. The team rates the
combined odds of these signals occurring by chance alone at less than 1 in 3
million.
“These results are very important as they
set the stage for future measurements of hypermassive neutron stars by
gravitational wave observatories,” said Chryssa Kouveliotou, chair of the
physics department at George Washington University in Washington, who was not
involved in the work.
By the 2030s, gravitational wave detectors
will be sensitive to kilohertz frequencies, providing new insights into the
short lives of supersized neutron stars. Until then, sensitive gamma-ray
observations and computer simulations remain the only available tools for
exploring them.
Compton’s BATSE instrument was developed
at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and provided the
first compelling evidence that gamma-ray bursts occurred far beyond our galaxy.
After operating for almost nine years, the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory was
deorbited on June 4, 2000, and destroyed as it entered Earth’s atmosphere.
Goddard manages both the Swift and Fermi missions.
Banner: Merging neutron stars, illustrated here, produce
a blast of gamma rays when they come together and collapse into a black hole.
Observations of two bursts by NASA's Compton mission indicate that before their
final collapse, the objects briefly form a single supersized neutron star. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center/CI Lab
by Francis
Reddy NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA’s Retired Compton Mission Reveals Superheavy Neutron Stars | NASA
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