Rare cosmic explosion brighter than billions of suns noticed in pink galaxy

Sep 07, 2023 at 3:27 PM
Rare cosmic explosion brighter than billions of suns noticed in pink galaxy

Astronomers have found a brand new sort of cosmic explosion which outshines almost each supernova detected within the universe.

As brilliant as lots of of billions of suns, however fast to fade – the uncommon and dazzling blast is believed to have been attributable to a black gap colliding with a star and was noticed by researchers at Queen’s University Belfast.

They first recognized the occasion, referred to as AT2022aedm, utilizing the Atlas community of robotic telescopes in Hawaii, Chile and South Africa.

They scan the sky each night time to seek for any object that strikes or modifications in brightness.

Researchers delved deeper into the blast with the New Technology Telescope in Chile and located that it seemed not like any recognized supernova and lasted lower than half as lengthy.

The group has been attempting to find probably the most highly effective cosmic explosions for over a decade.

Dr Matt Nicholl, from the School of Mathematics and Physics at Queen’s, described the invention as “one of the brightest we’ve ever seen”.

He mentioned: “Usually, with a very luminous supernova, it will have faded to maybe half of its peak brightness within a month. In the same amount of time, AT2022aedm faded to less than one per cent of its peak – it basically disappeared.”

Where the explosion occurred additionally got here as a shock to the group.

Dr Shubham Srivastav, additionally from Queen’s, mentioned: “Our data showed that this event happened in a massive, red galaxy two billion light years away. These galaxies contain billions of stars like our sun, but they shouldn’t have any stars big enough to end up as a supernova.”

An image from the European Southern Observatory New Technology Telescope showing a distant red galaxy (centre) where a cosmic explosion occurred. Pic: Queen's University Belfast
Image:
An picture from the European Southern Observatory New Technology Telescope exhibiting a distant pink galaxy (centre) the place the cosmic explosion occurred. Pic: Queen’s University Belfast

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Historical information confirmed there have been simply two different cosmic occasions with an analogous set of properties – found by the ROTSE and ZTF surveys in 2009 and 2020.

Dr Nicholl added: “We have named this new class of sources ‘Luminous Fast Coolers’, or LFCs. This is partly to do with how bright they are and how fast they fade and cool.

“But it is also partly as a result of myself and among the different researchers are enormous followers of Liverpool Football Club. It’s a pleasant coincidence that our LFCs appear to favor pink galaxies.”

Dr Nicholl added the discovery has opened up avenues for more research.

“The beautiful information set that we’ve got obtained guidelines out this being one other supernova. The most believable rationalization appears to be a black gap colliding with a star,” he said.

“If we discover extra LFCs, particularly within the extra native universe, we must always have the ability to check this situation. Collisions are extra possible in dense star clusters, so we will search for these on the websites of the explosions.”

The analysis paper has been revealed in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.