On August 27th, 1998, space probes positioned in different
parts of the solar system registered a strange barrage of
high-energy photons traveling through interplanetary space.
Astrophysicists quickly identified the source of this fusillade
as SGR1900+14, an object located some 20,000 light-years away
that is thought to be a "magnetar"?a neutron star with
an extraordinarily strong magnetic field. But even before its
highly magnetic nature was discovered, observational astronomers
had known that this star and several other "soft-gamma
repeaters" located in or near our galaxy give off
high-energy bursts from time to time. So the detection of gamma
rays coming from this direction was not a complete surprise.
What was astonishing was the intensity of the outpouring: The
event sent detectors off scale in some of the spacecraft
equipped to measure these emanations. Indeed, the radiation from
this faraway star was strong enough to ionize parts of the
earth's nighttime atmosphere almost as thoroughly as the sun
does during the day.
In the week that followed, newspapers across the
country ran stories describing the enormity of this celestial
event. To convey some sense of magnitude, many of these accounts
cited one astronomer's calculation that the energy released in
five minutes by the magnetar would be sufficient to power all of
civilization for billions of years to come. Yet investigators
have recently determined that this initial estimate may have
been off the mark: It now seems that the invisible flash of
high-energy radiation (x rays and gamma rays) must have been an
order of magnitude more intense than was first thought. This
reassessment appears in an article by Umran S. Inan of Stanford
University and five co-authors, published recently in the
journal Geophysical Research Letters.
Inan is
not an astrophysicist, but he and his colleagues at Stanford's
Space, Telecommunications and Radioscience Laboratory had been
collecting measurements from a network of very-low-frequency
radio receivers. Their equipment is tuned into broadcasts from a
small set of powerful transmitters that the U.S. Navy uses to
communicate with its submarines at sea. Although the content of
the military messages is undecipherable to them, investigators
such as Inan and physicist Richard Dowden (of the company
Low-Frequency Electromagnetic Research in Dunedin, New Zealand)
monitor such transmissions routinely, in part because they
convey quite a lot of information about the state of the earth's
ionosphere.
This region of the atmosphere above about
50 kilometers' altitude is too high to be studied by balloons
and too low to be monitored by satellites. But because the sun's
rays split molecules in this zone into positively charged ions
and negatively charged electrons, the ionosphere is more or less
conductive and acts both as a screen and as a reflective ceiling
for the radio waves that bounce back and forth between it and
the ground as they travel around the globe.
When Inan
and his colleagues looked carefully at their records of radio
reception during the event, they saw immediately that
transmissions passing through the hemisphere that had been
briefly bathed in radiation from the magnetar were profoundly
affected. The strength of radio signals propagating through the
night sky dropped to levels as low as those normally seen during
the day, when enhanced ionization from the sun's rays normally
attenuates such transmissions.
What is more, in their record of signals traveling from
Hawaii to Antarctica (where the background radio noise is quite
low), Inan and his coworkers were able to discern a series of
subtle oscillations in amplitude just after the initial blast of
high-energy photons hit the earth. These variations match the
very clear 5.16-second modulation registered by detectors on the
Ulysses spacecraft, an oscillation that astronomers believe
reveals the rotation rate of the distant source.
In
preparing their scholarly publication, Inan and his associates
tried to determine the exact nature of the ionospheric
disturbance that the magnetar had briefly created. But when they
used measurements from the Ulysses probe to specify the energy
spectrum of the incoming rays, their computer model had
difficulty reproducing the changes in radio reception. Indeed,
the only way to match their observations was to assume that
Ulysses had missed 90 percent of the action. So they
hypothesized that for every high-energy photon registered by the
spacecraft, there must have been nine undetected photons of
somewhat lower energy.
Interestingly, the "Gamma
Ray Burst" instrument Ulysses carries does, in fact,
contain two solid-state detectors designed to measure just such
low-energy photons, which are, technically, categorized as soft
x rays. Kevin Hurley of the University of California,
Berkeley?the investigator responsible for this instrument and
one of Inan's co-authors?says that although the high-energy
detectors continue to work well, the low-energy ones have aged
badly since they were built, nearly two decades ago. They are
now so noisy, Hurley explains, that they did not produce any
useful measurements.
Although other space probes carry
devices that are sensitive to photons in the hypothesized energy
range, all are directional devices, and none was pointed at the
right part of the sky when the burst took place. So these
spaceborne instruments, too, were of little help in uncovering
the soft x-ray component. In a sense, the earth's ionosphere
provided the best detector available. "We measure it as
well as anyone can measure it," quips Inan.
Indeed, the earth's ionosphere is so sensitive to incoming
radiation, and radio propagation is so sensitive to changes in
the ionosphere, that some casual radio listeners might well have
observed effects of this distant neutron star even before
scientists took note of it. Paul Harden, an engineer and amateur
radio enthusiast who works at the National Radio Astronomy
Observatory in Socorro, New Mexico, has been gathering anecdotal
reports about changes in radio reception that day. In Harden's
view, most of the accounts he received could be better ascribed
to the effects of a geomagnetic storm raging at the time, but a
few may reflect the gamma-ray burst. He describes, for example,
the experience of a nurse in Seattle who was listening to her
car radio on the way home from a late-night shift. (The burst
took place at 3:22 a.m. Pacific time.) To her great surprise,
the local FM station cut out and was replaced by one from
Nebraska. According to Harden, it is not unusual for the
increased ionization created by enhanced solar activity to cause
such radio anomalies, but this woman's experience was truly
peculiar because the weird events took place at night.
Inan and Dowden are both skeptical that the magnetar could have
been responsible for changes in reception at the very high
frequencies of the FM broadcast band. So perhaps this nurse's
recollection was, in fact, more influenced by fatigue than by
gamma radiation. But as Dowden confirms, there is no reason to
think that some short-wave and AM broadcasts received that night
would not have been affected. Reception of these signals over
much of the Pacific hemisphere would presumably have faded out
for a few minutes, all because the magnetic field of a distant
neutron star released a vast amount of energy in a sudden burst
some 20,000 years ago. Awesome, isn't it, what one can hear on
the radio??David Schneider