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Monday, October 23, 2017
Two Stars Collide: A Game Changer
Four times in the past 2 years, physicists working with mammoth
gravitational-wave detectors have sensed something go bump in the dark,
sending invisible ripples through spacetime. This past week, they announced
the detection of a fifth such disturbance—but this time astronomers saw
it, too, at every wavelength of light from gamma radiation to radio
waves. Just as physicists had predicted, the unprecedented view of the
cosmic cataclysm—in which two superdense neutron stars spiraled into
each other—brought with it a cornucopia of insights, each one of them a
major scientific advance. The super-dense stars crashed together 130 million light years away,
spewing out precious metals and other heavy elements like platinum and
uranium – and experts say the event has kickstarted a "new chapter in
astrophysics" and confirmed theories about the origin of the mysterious
neutron stars. The combined observation with gravitational
waves and light showed, as predicted, that so-called short gamma ray
bursts, among the most powerful events in the cosmos, spring from
neutron-star mergers. It demonstrated a hypothesized new type of stellar
object called a kilonova because it shines thousands of times brighter
than an ordinary nova. And it revealed that half the elements heavier
than iron are produced, perhaps exclusively, in neutron-star death
spirals.
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