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What made the brightest cosmic explosion of all time so exceptional?
The afterglow of the Brightest of All Time gamma-ray burst, captured by the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory's X-Ray Telescope. Credit: NASA/Swift/A. Beardmore (University of Leicester)
What made the brightest cosmic explosion of all time so exceptional?
by Staff Writers
Bath UK (SPX) Jun 08, 2023

Few cosmic explosions have attracted as much attention from space scientists as the one recorded on October 22 last year and aptly named the Brightest of All Time (BOAT). The event, produced by the collapse of a highly massive star and the subsequent birth of a black hole, was witnessed as an immensely bright flash of gamma rays followed by a slow-fading afterglow of light across frequencies.

Since picking up the BOAT signal simultaneously on their giant telescopes, astrophysicists the world over have been scrambling to account for the brightness of the gamma-ray burst (GRB) and the curiously slow fade of its afterglow.

Now an international team that includes Dr Hendrik Van Eerten from the Department of Physics at the University of Bath in the UK has formulated an explanation: the initial burst (known as GRB 221009A) was angled directly at Earth and it also dragged along an unusually large amount of stellar material in its wake.

The team's findings are published in the prestigious journal Science Advances. Dr Brendan O'Connor, a newly graduated doctoral student at the University of Maryland and George Washington University in Washington, DC is the study's lead author.

Dr Van Eerten, who co-led the theoretical analysis of the afterglow, said: "Other researchers working on this puzzle have also come to the conclusion that the jet was pointed directly at us - much like a garden hose angled to spray straight at you - and this definitely goes some way to explain why it was seen so brightly.

But what remained a puzzle was that the edges of the jet could not be seen at all.

"The slow fade of the afterglow is not characteristic of a narrow jet of gas, and knowing this made us suspect there was an additional reason for the intensity of the explosion, and our mathematical models have borne this out.

"Our work clearly shows that the GRB had a unique structure, with observations gradually revealing a narrow jet embedded within a wider gas outflow where an isolated jet would normally be expected."

So what made this GRB wider than normal? The researchers have a theory. As Dr Van Eerten explained: "GRB jets need to go through the collapsing star in which they are formed, and what we think made the difference in this case was the amount of mixing that happened between the stellar material and the jet, such that shock-heated gas kept appearing in our line of sight all the way up to the point that any characteristic jet signature would have been lost in the overall emission from the afterglow."

He added: "Our model helps not just to understand the BOAT, but also previous brightness record holders that had astronomers mystified about their lack of jet signature. These GRBs, like other GRBs, must be directed straight towards us when they happen, as it would be unphysical for that much energy to be expelled in all directions at once.

"An exceptional class of events appears to exist that are both extreme and manage to mask the directed nature of their gas flow. Future study into the magnetic fields that launch the jet and into the massive stars that host them should help reveal why these GRBs are so rare."

Dr O'Connor said: "The exceptionally long GRB 221009A is the brightest GRB ever recorded and its afterglow is smashing all records at all wavelengths. Because this burst is so bright and also nearby (cosmically speaking: it occurred at the minor distance of 2.4 billion light years from Earth), we think this is a once-in-a-thousand-year opportunity to address some of the most fundamental questions regarding these explosions, from the formation of black holes to tests of dark matter models."

New study describes unique jet structure of brightest gamma-ray burst ever
George Washington University
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 08 - When scientists detected the gamma-ray burst known as GRB 221009A on October 9, 2022, they dubbed it the BOAT, or the brightest-of-all-time. Now, months after its initial burst, scientists studying GRB 221009A describe an unusual structure to the jet of material expelled during the explosion that may explain GRB 221009A's extreme nature and why its afterglow remained visible for so long after the event. Researchers at the George Washington University and collaborating institutions published their findings today in the journal Science Advances.

Gamma-ray bursts are the most violent and energetic explosions in the Universe, releasing the same amount of energy in just a few seconds that the Sun produces over its entire lifetime. According to scientists, GRB 221009A resulted from the collapse of a massive star into a black hole.

Examining troves of multi-wavelength data from October's gamma-ray burst, the research team found that GRB 221009A's jet exhibited a narrow core with wide sloping wings, which was different from the types of jets seen in gamma-ray bursts produced by other cataclysmic events and may explain why scientists kept seeing GRB 221009A's multi-wavelength glow for months after the explosion.

"GRB 221009A represents a massive step forward in our understanding of gamma-ray bursts, and demonstrates that the most extreme explosions do not obey the standard physics assumed for garden variety gamma-ray bursts," Brendan O'Connor, GW graduate student and lead study author, says. O'Connor led the research team that was using the Gemini South Telescope in Chile to observe the event last October. "GRB 221009A might be the equivalent Rosetta stone of long GRBs, forcing us to revise our standard theories of how relativistic outflows are formed in collapsing massive stars."

The findings will fuel future studies of gamma-ray bursts and motivate scientists to create simulations of gamma-ray burst jet structures.

"For a long time, we have thought about jets as being shaped like ice cream cones," says Alexander van der Horst, associate professor of physics at GW and study co-author. "However, some gamma-ray bursts in recent years, and in particular the work presented here, show that we need more complex models and detailed computer simulations of gamma-ray burst jets."

Research Report:A structured jet explains the extreme GRB 221009A

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