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- <text id=91TT0812>
- <title>
- Apr. 15, 1991: New Challenge To The Big Bang?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 15, 1991 Saddam's Latest Victims
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPACE, Page 54
- New Challenge to the Big Bang?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Peering to the edge of the universe, an adventurous probe seeks
- to discover the mysterious origin of gamma rays
- </p>
- <p>By Jerome Cramer/Cape Canaveral
- </p>
- <p> Call it an unexpected bonus from the cold war. During
- top-secret monitoring of the dark side of the moon 25 years ago,
- U.S. scientists discovered what they feared might be clandestine
- Soviet nuclear tests in space. Spy satellites picked up massive
- bursts of gamma rays similar to those released during the
- explosion of atom bombs. But these bursters, as gamma-ray
- scientists began to call them, did not match any known pattern.
- They were brief, lasting from only a fraction of a second up to
- 100 seconds. Civilian experts were called in to study the data,
- and the Soviet-nuclear-test theory was eventually ruled out. But
- scientists remained puzzled: What were those fleeting yet
- powerful flashes of gamma rays, and where did they come from?
- </p>
- <p> Astronomers will get a chance to answer some of these
- questions--and more--over the next two to eight years as a
- result of last week's NASA launch of the Gamma Ray Observatory
- on board the space shuttle Atlantis. The 17.5-ton GRO will
- circle the earth at a height of 450 km (280 miles), mapping the
- heavens as it peers to the very edges of the universe.
- "Gamma-ray scientists are starved for information," says Richard
- Lingenfelter, an astronomer at the University of California at
- San Diego. Data gathered on such violent but poetic-sounding
- celestial bodies as neutron stars, supernovas and black holes
- could force astronomers to revise or even discard popular
- notions on the origin of the universe.
- </p>
- <p> Gamma rays are the most powerful type of radiation,
- thought to have been created during the explosion that launched
- the universe and its subsequent expansion. As distant heavenly
- bodies continue to collapse and explode, the only signals earth
- may receive of this activity are in the form of gamma rays. For
- example, gamma-ray bursters have been measured releasing more
- energy in a matter of seconds than the sun does in thousands of
- years. Since they carry no electric charge, gamma rays can plow
- through space unchanged, giving scientists a clear record of
- cosmic events. The atmosphere shields the earth from most gamma
- radiation, but this shield has forced scientists studying the
- rays to rely on instruments lofted aboard huge balloons or
- rockets. Until now researchers have only peeked through the veil
- of the universe; last week's GRO launch gives them a powerful
- tool and years to probe the outer limits.
- </p>
- <p> The GRO satellite will rely on four sophisticated
- instruments, three of which are the size of small automobiles,
- to record the full range of gamma-ray activity. The devices will
- also conduct tests of the skies throughout the electromagnetic
- spectrum, using X rays, visible light and infrared light. These
- sensitive instruments were developed by a team of scientists
- from Germany, the Netherlands, the U.S. and the European Space
- Agency. The four monitors will all use liquid and solid crystals
- to record the origin of gamma-ray sources. As the rays smash
- into the crystals, they produce flashes of light called
- scintillations. Those data will be measured and sent back to
- earth. One of the instruments will track gamma-ray bursts,
- events that until recently some scientists did not believe
- existed. "It's a little like trying to catch and study
- lightning," a GRO scientist explains.
- </p>
- <p> During the first 15 months, the mission will
- systematically create a gamma-ray map of the universe. Sources
- of energy that have long puzzled scientists will be recorded and
- cataloged. Data will be fed back to earth, where scientists
- poring over the information will zero in on particularly
- interesting phenomena or request NASA to point the GRO to a
- specific corner of the sky. NASA has already accepted 50
- proposals, and is funding experiments suggested by theoretical
- astronomers from around the world. Earth's own Milky Way will
- get a thorough working over; NASA astronomers are intent on
- discovering whether the energy at the center of the galaxy is
- a single black hole or a series of smaller objects. "There are
- weird collisions of matter and antimatter going on in the center
- of the Milky Way," says NASA astrophysicist Alan Bunner.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists know so little about the forces in the universe
- that the real goal of the GRO is to gather basic data to guide
- astronomers in what to look for. "We're on a fishing expedition
- in outer space," says University of New Hampshire professor
- James Ryan. "We can hear the fish jumping, but we don't know
- what they look like." Ryan, who helped develop one of the
- instruments on the GRO, says the gamma-ray information, when
- matched with data streaming in from the Hubble Space Telescope
- launched last April, is sure to shake up currently accepted
- theories on the origin and scope of the universe. This new
- information, combined with data that will be compiled from
- future observations by X-ray and infrared satellites, could
- significantly change the Big Bang theory and send scientists
- back to the drawing board.
- </p>
- <p> NASA engineers say they are sure the GRO will not run into
- any of the difficulties that have plagued the Hubble telescope.
- Launch delays caused by the Challenger disaster and other
- problems have given them a chance to "end-to-end" test all four
- satellite components. But scientists admit that they are eagerly
- waiting for the first bits of information on the violent world
- of gamma rays to begin streaming back to earth.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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