
Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
A simple survey yields a cosmic conundrum
August 01, 2006
Santa Cruz, CA - A survey of galaxies observed along the sightlines to quasars and gamma-ray bursts-both extremely luminous, distant objects-has revealed a puzzling inconsistency. Galaxies appear to be four times more common in the direction of gamma-ray bursts than in the direction of quasars. Quasars are thought to be powered by accretion of material onto supermassive black holes in the centers of distant galaxies. Gamma-ray bursts, the death throes of massive stars, are the most energetic explosions in the universe. But there is no reason to expect galaxies in the foreground to have any association with these background light sources.
"The result contradicts our basic concepts of cosmology, and we are struggling to explain it," said Jason X. Prochaska, associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Prochaska and graduate student Gabriel Prochter led the survey, which used data from NASA's Swift satellite to obtain observations of the transient, bright afterglows of long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). They described their findings in a paper accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. The paper, which could have strange cosmological implications, has been a source of significant debate among astronomers throughout the world.
The study is based on a fairly straightforward concept. When light from a GRB or a quasar passes through a foreground galaxy, the absorption of certain wavelengths of light by gas associated with the galaxy creates a characteristic signature in the spectrum of light from the distant object. This provides a marker for the presence of a galaxy in front of the object, even if the galaxy itself is too faint to observe directly.
Prochter and Prochaska analyzed 15 GRBs in the new study and found strong absorption signatures indicating the presence of galaxies along 14 GRB sightlines. They had previously used data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to determine the incidence of galaxies along the sightlines to quasars. Based on the quasar study, they would have predicted only 3.8 galaxies instead of the 14 detected along the GRB sightlines.
The quasar analysis was based on more than 50,000 SDSS observations, so the data for quasars are much more robust statistically than the data for GRBs, Prochaska said. Nevertheless, the probability that their results are just a statistical fluke is less than about one in 10,000, he said.
The researchers examined three potential explanations for the inconsistency. The first is obscuration of some quasars by dust in galaxies. The idea is that if a quasar is behind a dusty galaxy it wouldn't be seen, and this could skew the results. "The counter argument is that with this huge database of quasar observations, the effect of dust has been well characterized and it should be minimal," Prochter said.
Another possibility is that the absorption lines in the GRB spectra are from gas ejected by the GRBs themselves, rather than from gas in intervening galaxies. But in nearly every case when researchers have taken a closer look in the direction of the GRB, they have in fact found a galaxy at the same position as the gas.
The third idea is that the intervening galaxy may act as a gravitational lens, enhancing the brightness of the background object, and that this effect is somehow different for GRBs than for quasars. Although Prochaska said he prefers this explanation, several factors make strong lensing of the GRBs seem unlikely.
"Those who know more about gravitational lensing than I do tell me it's unlikely to be the answer," Prochaska said.
The paper, a draft of which has been posted on an Internet server for several weeks, has stimulated widespread discussion and at least one new paper proposing a potential explanation. But so far the findings remain perplexing.
"A lot of people have been scratching their heads, and most hope that it goes away," Prochaska said. "The GRB sample is small, so we would like to triple or quadruple the number in our analysis. That should happen during Swift's extended mission, but it will take time."
University of California-Santa Cruz
|
 |

|
Gravitation, Cosmology, and Cosmic-Ray Physics (Physics Through the 1990s: A Series)
by Cosmology, and Cosmic-Ray Physics Panel on Gravitation (Author), Physics Survey Committee (Author), Board on Physics and Astronomy (Author), National Research Council (Author)
|
|
|
Ground-based cosmic-ray instrumentation catalog (Air Force surveys in geophysics)
by M. A Shea (Author)
|

|
Empedocles' Cosmic Cycle: A Reconstruction from the Fragments and Secondary Sources (Cambridge Classical Studies)
by Denis O'Brien (Author)
The cosmic cycle described in the surviving fragments of Empedocles' poem is the alternation, in endless succession, of Love and Strife. Love is the cause of happiness and unity; Strife the cause of separation and misery. These forces rule in turn as they cause the One and the Many. Love makes the elements into a blissful whole, the Sphere; Strife breaks into the Sphere and causes movement and division - the condition of the world, according to Empedocles, in which we now live. Dr O'Brien's book is primarily an analysis of this elaborate system. It seeks to determine the positions which Love and Strife occupy in the world at different times, the processes involved in becoming one and becoming many and the duration of being one and being many. It examines such associated themes as...
|

|
Cosmic and Meta-Cosmic Theology in Aristotle's Lost Dialogues (Brill's Studies in Intellectual History)
by A. P. Bos (Author)
|

|
Statistical Physics for Cosmic Structures (Lecture Notes in Physics)
by A. Gabrielli (Author), F. Sylos Labini (Author), M. Joyce (Author), L. Pietronero (Author)
The physics of scale-invariant and complex systems is a novel field which is including topics from several disciplines ranging from condensed matter physics to geology, biology, astrophysics and economics. This widespread inter-disciplinary corresponds to the fact that these new ideas allow us to look at natural phenomena in aradically new and original way, eventually leading to unifying concepts independently of the detailed structure of the systems. The objective is the study of complex, scale-invariant, and more ingeneral stochastic structures, that appear both in space and time in avast variety of natural phenomena. New types of collective behaviors arise and their understanding represents one of the most challenging areas in modern Statistical Physics. This book has been conceived...
|
|
|
Heraclitus: The Cosmic Fragments
by Heraclitus (Author), G. S. Kirk (Translator)
This work provides a text and an extended study of those fragments of Heraclitus' philosophical utterances whose subject is the world as a whole rather than man and his part in it. Professor Kirk discusses fully the fragments which he finds genuine and treats in passing others that were generally accepted as genuine but here considered paraphrased or spurious. In securing his text, Professor Kirk has taken into account all the ancient testimonies, and in his critical work he attached particular importance to the context in which each fragment is set. To each he gives a selective apparatus, a literal translation and and an extended commentary in which problems of textual and philosophical criticism are discussed. Ancient accounts of Heraclitus were inadequate and misleading, and as Kirk...
|
|
|
Heraclitus: The Cosmic Fragments
by Heraclitus (Author), G. S. Kirk (Editor)
This work provides a text and an extended study of those fragments of Heraclitus' philosophical utterances whose subject is the world as a whole rather than man and his part in it. Professor Kirk discusses fully the fragments which he finds genuine and treats in passing others that were generally accepted as genuine but here considered paraphrased or spurious. In securing his text, Professor Kirk has taken into account all the ancient testimonies, and in his critical work he attached particular importance to the context in which each fragment is set. To each he gives a selective apparatus, a literal translation and and an extended commentary in which problems of textual and philosophical criticism are discussed. Ancient accounts of Heraclitus were inadequate and misleading, and as Kirk...
|

|
Law, Reason, and the Cosmic City: Political Philosophy in the Early Stoa
by Katja Maria Vogt (Author)
The notions of the cosmic city and the common law are central to early Stoic political thought. As Vogt shows, together they make up one complex theory. A city is a place governed by the law. Yet on the law pervading the cosmos can be considered a true law, and thus the cosmos is the only real city. A city is also a dwelling-place--in the case of the cosmos, the dwelling-place of all human beings. Further, a city demarcates who belongs together as fellow-citizens. The thought that we should view all other human beings as belonging to us constitutes the core of Stoic cosmopolitanism. All human beings are citizens of the cosmic city in the sense of living in the world. But the demanding task of acquiring wisdom allows a person to become a citizen in the strict sense: someone who lives...
|

|
Cosmic Man - The Divine Presence: The Theology of St. Gregory of Nyssa/ Ca 330 to 395 A.D.
by Paulos Mar Gregorios (Author)
|
|
|
Geomagnetic and solar modulation effects of sea-level cosmic ray intensity: Summary of cosmic ray latitude surveys aboard the expedition ship Soya during ... (JARE scientific reports : Series A ; no. 5)
by Masahiro Kodama (Author)
|
|