Huge energetic flare from magnetic neutron star detected
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[April 25, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Magnetars are among the universe's most extreme
objects - a class of the compact stellar remnants called neutron stars
that possess immensely strong magnetic fields. Once in a while, they
produce enormous eruptions of gamma rays in the strongest nondestructive
release of energy known in the cosmos.
Scientists have now detected the most distant-known instance of one of
these eruptions, called a giant flare, from a magnetar residing in a
galaxy called Messier 82, or M82. This surge of gamma rays, the most
energetic form of light, unleashed in just a tenth of a second the
amount of energy our sun would emit in a span of roughly 10,000 years,
they said.
Only two confirmed giant flares have been observed in our Milky Way
galaxy, in 2004 and 1998, and only one previous one in another galaxy,
in 1979 in the Milky Way's neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud, the
researchers said.
"Giant flares are very rare events," said astrophysicist Sandro
Mereghetti of Italy's National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) in
Milan, lead author of the research published on Wednesday in the journal
Nature. "The Milky Way contains at least 30 magnetars, possibly many
more, which have not been seen to emit giant flares."
M82, nicknamed the "cigar galaxy" because when viewed edge-on it has an
elongated and cigar-like shape, is 12 million light-years from Earth in
the constellation Ursa Major. A light year is the distance light travels
in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km). The magnetar giant
flare from the Large Magellanic Cloud was about 160,000 light-years from
Earth.
The M82 giant flare was the most distant known but not the most
energetic. The one spotted in 2004 had the energy equivalent to about a
million years of output from the sun.
While there are more energetic cosmic events such as supernova
explosions at the end of a massive star's life and gamma-ray bursts
caused by two neutron stars merging, those involve destruction, unlike
giant flares. Magnetars also emit occasional surges of gamma rays and
X-rays at lower energy levels than giant flares.
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An artist's impression of a type of neutron star called a magnetar.
Magnetars are the cosmic objects with the strongest magnetic fields
ever measured in the universe. European Space Agency/Handout via
REUTERS
Neutron stars are born in the explosion and collapse of stars eight
to 25 times the mass of the sun at the end of their life cycle. They
compress one or two times the sun's mass into a sphere only the size
of a city.
"They are the most compact and dense astrophysical objects. They are
as dense as atomic nuclei," INAF astrophysicist and study co-author
Michela Rigoselli said of neutron stars.
The main trait that sets magnetars apart from other neutron stars is
a magnetic field 1,000 to 10,000 times stronger than an ordinary
neutron star's magnetism and a trillion times that of the sun.
"We can say that magnetars are neutron stars powered by their own
magnetic energy. This does not happen in ordinary neutron stars,"
Mereghetti said.
"A giant flare originates from a reconfiguration and a reconnection
of the magnetic field of the magnetar," Rigoselli added.
The magnetar in this research is believed to spin rapidly, perhaps
completing a rotation every few seconds. Its giant flare was
detected by the European Space Agency's Integral space observatory
on Nov. 15, 2023, in M82, a galaxy boasting a star formation rate
much higher than the Milky Way's - called a "starburst galaxy."
"The fact that Messier 82 is so active in star formation is relevant
for our finding," Rigoselli said. "In such an active galaxy, there
are many young, massive stars like those which evolve into supernova
explosions and give birth to neutron stars. It would have been
suspicious to detect a magnetar giant flare coming from a quiescent
galaxy."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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