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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Astrophysics #Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on nasa.gov

NASA Discovers Crash of Extreme Stars in Unexpected Site A fleet of NASA missions has likely uncovered a collision between two ultradense stars in a tiny galaxy buried in a huge stream of gas. Astr...

#Chandra #X-Ray #Observatory #Astrophysics #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

NASA Researchers Probe Tangled Magnetospheres of Merging Neutron Stars New simulations performed on a NASA supercomputer are providing scientists with the most comprehensive look yet into the maels...

#Ames #Research #Center #Astrophysics #Gamma-Ray #Bursts […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

NASA Researchers Probe Tangled Magnetospheres of Merging Neutron Stars New simulations performed on a NASA supercomputer are providing scientists with the most comprehensive look yet into the maels...

#Ames #Research #Center #Astrophysics #Gamma-Ray #Bursts […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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NASA’s StarBurst instrument outside a thermal vacuum chamber at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. NASA/Daniel Kocevski Heated, cooled, shaken, and settled – NASA’s StarBurst instrument is several steps closer to being ready for launch. The small satellite is now awaiting instrument calibration following a successful integration in Canada and rigorous testing by engineers at the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. StarBurst is designed to detect the initial emission of short gamma-ray bursts, some of the most powerful explosions in the universe and a key indicator of neutron star mergers. This would provide valuable insight into such events, which are also detected through gravitational waves by observatories on Earth. These events are where most of the heavy metals in the universe, such as gold and platinum, are formed. To date, only one such event has been observed simultaneously in gravitational waves and gamma-rays; StarBurst _is expected to_ find up to 10 per year. StarBurst arrived at NASA Marshall in March 2025. During its time at the center, the instrument underwent thermal testing in a vacuum chamber and flight vibration testing. The team held StarBurst’s nonstop thermal testing in a vacuum chamber, 24 hours a day for 18 days. Technicians placed radioactive material into the vacuum chamber, giving StarBurst the ability to detect gamma-ray signals during the tests. NASA Marshall test engineers fit test the multi-layer insulation blanket in early August at Marshall’s Stray Light Facility. The thermal blanket will insulate the crystal detector units. NASA/Michael Allen Test teams conducted thermal balance testing to simulate the hottest and coldest situations the instrument will operate under in space. Data from these tests improves thermal models used by NASA engineers, while also ensuring the satellite can handle these temperatures in orbit. NASA engineers also completed a 24-hour “bake-out,” a process that removes unwanted gas or vapor from the instrument using extreme heat in a vacuum. “NASA’s StarBurst mission is ready for its next stage of assembly and is one step closer to flight,” said Daniel Kocevski, principal investigator at NASA Marshall. “Testing at NASA Marshall has verified engineering models, adding our understanding of how StarBurst will operate in space as it observes gamma ray emission from merging neutron stars to help us better understand the building blocks of Earth—and the universe.” Outside of the vacuum chamber, a “vibe test” bolted the instrument to a special “shaker table” to simulate the vibrations and turbulence StarBurst will experience during launch. While at NASA Marshall, StarBurst underwent a series of tests in a vacuum chamber NASA The Marshall team shipped the StarBurst instrument to Space Flight Laboratory at the University of Toronto, which manufactured the spacecraft bus, in August. Prior to shipment, teams at Marshall’s Stray Light Facility fit-tested the multi-layer insulation blanket needed to insulate the crystal detector units from the harsh space environment. StarBurst is equipped with 12 of these detectors, which serve as the main gamma-ray detection system on the spacecraft. Marshall team members traveled to Toronto and were on hand to help integrate the instrument with the spacecraft bus in early September. Testing at Marshall set the stage for planned post-integration testing, which included functional testing and electromagnetic compatibility testing. StarBurst is scheduled to undergo additional calibration, vibration, and thermal vacuum testing in the spring. Integration teams intend to have StarBurst launch-ready by June 2026. NASA plans to launch the satellite as early as 2027 during the next run of the Laser-Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory to maximize the chance of detecting gamma-ray bursts that coincide with gravitational wave events. To date, such a joint gamma-ray and gravitational-wave detection has been observed only once. StarBurst was successfully integrated with the spacecraft bus Marshall team members were on hand to help integrate the instrument with the spacecraft bus at the Space Flight Laboratory at the University of Toronto in early September. NASA StarBurst is a collaborative effort led by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, with partnerships with the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, the University of Alabama Huntsville, the Universities Space Research Association, and the University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies Space Flight Laboratory. StarBurst was selected for development as part of the NASA Astrophysics Pioneers program, which supports lower-cost, smaller hardware missions to conduct compelling astrophysics science. To learn more about StarBurst visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/starburst/

Shaken, Not Stirred: NASA’s StarBurst Aces Extreme Temperature Tests Heated, cooled, shaken, and settled – NASA’s StarBurst instrument is several steps closer to being ready for launch. The s...

#General #Astrophysics #Gamma #Rays #Gamma-Ray #Bursts

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#Supernovae #Cosmology #Black #Holes #Jwst #Gamma #Ray #Bursts

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#Radiowave #bursts linked to onset of intense #auroral #storms

Southampton scientists link auroral beads (necklace-like lights) to intense low-frequency radio waves, suggesting a trigger for spectacular magnetospheric substorms (auroras). scitechupdates.com/r...

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Study pinpoints the exact two ages at which humans age the most dramatically Getting older is weird. You're trucking along, enjoying your middle-aged life, finally feeling like a real adult, when you look in the mirror one day and gasp. "Where did those _wrinkles_ come from?" "Is that skin on my arm… _crepey_?!?" "Why am I _aching_ like that?" Somewhere in your mid-40s, you start noticing obvious signs of aging that seem to arrive overnight. You assumed it was a gradual process that you just hadn't noticed, but it sure as heck felt like it happened really fast. New research indicates that may very well be the case. A 2024 study from researchers at Stanford tracked thousands of different molecules in people age 25 to 75 and found that people tend to make two big leaps in aging—one around age 44 and another around age 60. These findings indicate that aging can actually happen in bursts. Simpsons Gif y.yarn.co “We’re not just changing gradually over time. There are some really dramatic changes,” said senior study author Michael Snyder, Ph.D., a geneticist and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford University. “It turns out the mid-40s is a time of dramatic change, as is the early 60s. And that’s true no matter what class of molecules you look at.” The researchers assumed the mid-40s changes would be attributed to menopausal or perimenopausal changes in women influencing the overall numbers, but when they separated the results by sex they saw similar changes in men in their 40s. > @suddenly_susan_ > > The accuracy 🤣 #40s #genxtiktok #womenover40 #relatable "“This suggests that while menopause or perimenopause may contribute to the changes observed in women in their mid-40s, there are likely other, more significant factors influencing these changes in both men and women. Identifying and studying these factors should be a priority for future research,” said study author Xiaotao Shen, PhD, a former Stanford Medicine postdoctoral scholar who now teaches at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. Aging happens in bursts, scientists find.Canva Photos The study included 108 participants who submitted blood and other samples every few months for several years. The scientists tracked age-related changes in 135,000 different molecules—nearly 250 billion distinct data points—to see how aging occurs. The study may shed light on the reasons for jumps in certain diseases and maladies at certain ages. For the 40-somethings, scientists found significant changes in molecules related to alcohol, caffeine, and lipid metabolism, cardiovascular disease, and skin and muscle. For those in their 60s, changes related to carbohydrate and caffeine metabolism, immune regulation, kidney function, cardiovascular disease, and skin and muscle were found. Research shows the body goes through specific changes in our 40s and 60s.Canva Photos The study authors did note that lifestyle might play a role in some of these changes. For instance, alcohol metabolism may be influenced by people drinking more heavily in their 40s, which tends to be a period of higher stress for many people. However, the researchers added that these bursts of aging in the mid-40s and early 60s indicate that people may want to pay closer attention to their health around those ages and make lifestyle changes that support greater overall health, such as increasing exercise or limiting alcohol. The research team plans to study the drivers of these aging bursts to find out why they happen at these ages, but whatever the reasons, it's nice to know that the seemingly sudden onset of age-related woes isn't just in our imaginations. It's understandable that we worry about aging, as physical signs of aging remind us of our own mortality. We also have all kinds of social messaging that tells us youth is ideal and beautiful and old is bad and ugly, so of course we give aging the side-eye. But none of us can avoid aging altogether, so the more positive and healthy we are in our approach to aging, the better off we'll be, no matter when and to what degree aging hits us. _This story originally appeared last year. It has been updated._
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Original post on astro.gla.ac.uk

A Flare-related Decimetric Type-IV Radio Burst Induced by the X2 Radiation of Electron Cyclotron Maser Emission by Lv et al. Decimetric broadband radio bursts (with frequencies of hundreds of MHz t...

#Solar #Radio #Science #Highlights #solar #flare #Type […]

[Original post on astro.gla.ac.uk]

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Scientists Say They Can't Explain the Signal They Just Detected From Beyond Our Galaxy The signal, a gamma ray burst, kept repeating — which has never been seen before, and, according to astronomers, should be impossible.

Scientists Say They Can't Explain the Signal They Just Detected From Beyond Our Galaxy Gamma ray bursts are the most powerful explosions in the universe, unleashing as much energy as the Sun wi...

#Off #World #Black #holes #gamma #ray #bursts #stars

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Original post on science.nasa.gov

Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Stained Glass Coloring Book Our Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope measures some of the highest-energy bursts of light in the universe to help scientists answer all sor...

#The #Universe #Active #Galaxies #Fermi #Gamma-Ray […]

[Original post on science.nasa.gov]

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Explore the Universe * Universe Home * Basics * Cosmic History * Building Blocks * Forces * Galaxies * Overview * Types * Evolution * Large Scale Structures * Black Holes * Overview * Types * Anatomy * Black Hole Week * Stars * Overview * Types * Multiple Star Systems * Planetary Systems * Exoplanets * Exploration * Sensing the Universe * Telescopes 101 * Observatories * More * News * Deep Dives * Quick Reads * Graphics * Glossary # NASA’s Guide to Visiting a Gamma-Ray Burst ## #### #### Are you looking for a new vacation spot? Perhaps one with spectacular fireworks? While gamma-ray bursts produce brilliant displays of different kinds of light across, we can’t recommend visiting one. Before making up your mind, watch this handy video to learn more about what gamma-ray bursts are, how to find them, and safety considerations for watching one. ### Our intrepid Traveler has decided to visit a gamma-ray burst for their next vacation. If you’d like to follow their adventure, check out this video for tips and tricks. ## Digital Wallpapers * Short Gamma-Ray Burst Wallpaper * Long Gamma-Ray Burst Wallpaper * Gamma-Ray Burst Jet Wallpaper ## Short Gamma-Ray Burst Some gamma-ray bursts come from two neutron stars that spiral into each other and crash. Available for both desktops and smartphones. Download for desktop and mobile NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ## Long Gamma-Ray Burst Some gamma-ray bursts come from large stars at the end of their lives. Their cores collapse, and they explode as supernovae. Available for both desktops and smartphones Download for desktop and mobile NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ## Gamma-Ray Burst Jet Gamma-ray bursts produce a pair of cones of superfast and superhot material. These jets are the source of the gamma rays, and we can only see them if we’re in the right place at the right time. Available for both desktops and smartphones. Download for desktop and mobile NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ## Grab a Traveler GIF * ### Math is Cool Understanding gamma-ray bursts can involve a lot of math, but our Traveler is up to the challenge! Download your GIFs here NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * ### Short Gamma-Ray Burst Some gamma-ray bursts come from two neutron stars that spiral into each other and crash. These are called short gamma-ray bursts. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * ### Long Gamma-Ray Burst One type of gamma-ray burst comes from large stars at the ends of their lives. Their cores collapse and they explode in supernovae. These are called long gamma-ray bursts. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * ### Earth’s Atmosphere Protects Us from Gamma Rays Earth’s atmosphere shields us from the gamma rays produced by gamma-ray bursts. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * ### Satellites Watch for Gamma-Ray Bursts We have detectors on a lot of spacecraft watching the entire sky to catch gamma-ray bursts, and they alert other telescopes to take a look when one happens. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * ### Gamma-Ray Bursts are Beautiful We can learn about stars, black holes, and much more from gamma-ray bursts, which are among the brightest light shows in the universe. Here, the Traveler watches one from the safety of their rocket ship. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Keep Exploring ## Discover More Topics From NASA Black Holes Hubble Online Activities For Fun & Learning Citizen Science

NASA’s Guide to Visiting a Gamma-Ray Burst Are you looking for a new vacation spot? Perhaps one with spectacular fireworks? While gamma-ray bursts produce brilliant displays of different kinds of...

#The #Universe #Gamma-Ray #Bursts

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Original post on futurism.com

Scientists Detect Precise Origin of Mysterious Signal From Deep Space For almost two decades, astronomers have been breaking their heads, trying to explain extremely bright flashes of radio bursts ...

#Off #World #CHIME #fast #radio #bursts #FRBs #james #webb […]

[Original post on futurism.com]

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Original post on behindtheblack.com

Using Webb astronomers have for the first time identified the source of a fast radio burst Astronomers using the Webb Space Telescope have now successfully pinpointed a specific object that appears...

#Points #of #Information #astronomy #engineering […]

[Original post on behindtheblack.com]

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Original post on behindtheblack.com

Using Webb astronomers have for the first time identified the source of a fast radio burst Astronomers using the Webb Space Telescope have now successfully pinpointed a specific object that appears...

#Points #of #Information #astronomy #engineering […]

[Original post on behindtheblack.com]

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Original post on behindtheblack.com

Using Webb astronomers have for the first time identified the source of a fast radio burst Astronomers using the Webb Space Telescope have now successfully pinpointed a specific object that appears...

#Points #of #Information #astronomy #engineering […]

[Original post on behindtheblack.com]

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