FAST RADIO BURST - SCI & TECH

News: Scientists trace powerful radio signal to most distant galaxy yet

 

What's in the news?

       Every day and night, hundreds of thousands of intense, brief flashes of radiation suddenly flicker on and then off all across the sky.

       These “fast radio bursts” are invisible to the naked eye, but to a radio telescope many almost outshine everything else in the sky for a few thousandths of a second.

 

Fast Radio Bursts:

       They are mysterious emissions of radio light (or Radio Waves) that come from the far reaches of the universe.

       FRBs reach Earth from faraway galaxies, emitting as much energy in a millisecond as the sun does over weeks.

       They are the brightest radio bursts found in nature.

       Astrophysicists have only been able to 'see' FRBs momentarily using large radio telescopes, but their precise origins and causes are unknown.

       Some FRBs are 'one-off' phenomena, while others are repeaters, flashing earth intermittently.

       The phenomenon was first reported in 2007.

       A defining property of these bursts is their dispersion, the bursts produce a spectrum of radio waves, and as the waves travel through matter, they spread out or disperse with bursts at higher radio frequencies arriving at telescopes earlier than those at lower frequencies.


Significance:

  1. It can be used to understand the three–dimensional structure of matter in the universe.
  2. It will even help to learn about the origin and evolution of the universe.
  3. Big questions still remain, and this object is giving us challenging clues about those questions relating to the Universe.