Lip Service Radio Lead Stories

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Distant Star EXPLODES!


The explosion of a star halfway across the universe was so huge it set a record for the most distant object that could be seen on Earth by the naked eye.

The aging star, in a previously unknown galaxy, exploded in a gamma ray burst 7.5 billion light-years away, its light finally reaching Earth early Wednesday.

The gamma rays were detected by NASA's Swift satellite at 2:12 a.m. "We'd never seen one before so bright and at such a distance," NASA's Neil Gehrels said.

NASA has no reports that any sky-watchers spotted the burst, which lasted less than an hour.

Telescopic measurements show that the burst - which occurred when the universe was about half its current age - was bright enough to be seen without a telescope.

The starburst would have appeared as bright as some of the stars in the handle of the Little Dipper constellation, said Pennsylvania State University astronomer David Burrows.

How it looked wasn't remarkable, but the distance traveled was. The 7.5 billion light years away far eclipses the previous naked-eye record of 2.5 million light years. One light year is 5.9 trillion miles.

"This is roughly halfway to the edge of the universe," Burrows said.

Before it exploded, the star was about 40 times bigger than the sun.

The explosion vaporized any planet nearby, said Gehrels, chief of NASA's astroparticles physics lab at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This to me is scarey. If we are now
just seeing the flash of light when
or will we feel any type of a Earthquake from the blast ?

Anonymous said...

LOL NO! This star is like 4 billion light years away from earth, and the light just now reached earth, that means that this star actaully exploaded before earth was even created. This just shows you how powerfull a exploding star is, and if a star closer to us exploded it would brighten up are night sky.