| Swift
Mission Nabs Its First Distance Measurement to Star Explosion
5 April 2005—The NASA-led
Swift
mission has measured the distance to two gamma-ray bursts
-- back to back, from opposite parts of the sky -- and both were
from over nine billion light years away, unleashed billions of
years before the Sun and Earth formed.
These achievements are the mission's first direct distance,
or redshift, measurements, its latest milestone since the Swift
satellite's launch in November 2004. The distances were attained
with Swift's Ultraviolet/OpticalTelescope (UVOT).
The Swift science team said that these types of distance measurements
will become routine, allowing scientists to create a map to understand
where, when and how these brilliant, fleeting bursts of light
are created.
"Swift will detect more gamma-ray bursts than any satellite
that has come before it, and now will be able to pin down distances
to many of these bursts too," said Peter
Roming, UVOT Lead
Scientist at Penn State. "These two aren't distance record-breakers,
but they're certainly from far out there. The second of the two
bursts was bright enough to be seen from Earth with a good backyard
telescope."
Gamma-ray bursts are the most powerful explosions known in the
Universe and are thought to signal the birth of a black hole
--either through a massive star explosion or through a merger
smaller black holes or neutron stars. Several appear each day
from our vantage point. They are difficult to detect and study,
however, because they occur randomly from any point in the sky
and last only a few milliseconds to about a minute.
Swift, with three telescopes, is designed to detect bursts and
turn autonomously within seconds to focus its telescopes on the
burst afterglow, which can linger for hours to weeks. The UVOT
is a joint product of Penn State and the Mullard
Space Science Laboratory in England.
Swift detected bursts on March 18 and 19, as indicted in their
names: GRB 050318 and GRB 050319. The UVOT team estimated that
the redshifts are 1.44 and 3.24, respectively, which corresponds
to distances of about 9.2 billion and 11.6 billion light years.
(The second estimate reflects a more precise measurement made
with the ground-based Nordic
Optical Telescope.) Distance measurements
are attained through analysis of the burst afterglow.
Swift has detected 24 bursts so far. GRB 050318 was the first
burst in which the UVOT detected an afterglow. The lack of afterglow
detection is interesting in its own right, Roming said, because
it helps scientists understand why some bursts create certain
kinds of afterglows, if any. For example, Swift's X-ray Telescope
has detected afterglows from several bursts. The UVOT detected
afterglows in GRB 050318 and GRB 050319 in optical light, but
not significantly in ultraviolet.
"Every burst is a little different, and when we add them
all up we will begin to see the full picture," said Keith
Mason, the U.K. UVOT Lead at University
College London's Mullard
Space Science Laboratory.
Mason said that UVOT distance measurements will become more
precise in the upcoming months as new instruments aboard Swift
are employed.
Swift is a medium-class explorer mission managed by NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Swift
is a NASA mission with participation of the Italian
Space Agency and the Particle
Physics and Astronomy Research Council in the United Kingdom.
It was built in collaboration with national laboratories, universities
and international partners, including Penn State; Los
Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico; Sonoma
State University in
California; the University of
Leicester in Leicester, England;
the Mullard Space Science Laboratory in Dorking, England; the
Brera Observatory of
the University of Milan in Italy; and the
ASI Science Data Center in Rome, Italy.
More information about each of the Swift-detected gamma-ray
bursts, updated every five minutes, is available on the web at:
http://grb.sonoma.edu. Additional information about Swift is
available on the Internet at http://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov.
[ C. W. / L. C. ]
CONTACTS:
Peter Roming: roming@astro.psu.edu, Penn State, (+1) 814-777-7745
and (+1) 814-865-7747
Lynn Cominsky (Swift PIO): Sonoma State University, lynnc@universe.sonoma.edu,
(+1) 707-664-2655
Barbara K. Kennedy (Penn State PIO), Penn State, science@psu.edu,
(+1) 814-863-4682
IMAGES:
Many images of the Swift observatory are on the web at
http://swift.sonoma.edu/resources/multimedia/images/
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