Observation of two neutron stars merger 'breakthrough of the year'

Neutron stars are the dense, collapsed cores that remain after large stars die in a supernova explosion

IANS  |  Washington 

The first observations of a between two faraway stars, a violent celestial event that generated tiny ripples in the fabric of called gravitational waves, was the "breakthrough of the year", according to the journal Science.

Although the two stars spiralled together 130 million light years away, the event was sensed by enormous detectors on Earth.

stars are the dense, collapsed cores that remain after large stars die in a supernova explosion.

Scientists made the first direct observation of the two stars colliding on August 17.

Gravitational waves from the event first arrived at the twin Interferometer (LIGO) detectors, located in the US and the Virgo detector, located near Pisa,

Seconds later, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on NASA's Gamma-ray Space Telescope detected a short burst of gamma rays.

This also triggered an explosion studied by hundreds of astronomers around the world.

Researchers first picked up on gravitational waves over two years ago, when two massive black holes crashed into each other.

This space tremor was detected by the LIGO, a discovery that won the 2017 Nobel Prize in

The discovery showed that gravitational waves offer a new way of observing the universe and a major tool for astronomers.

"Gravitational waves are the gift that keeps on giving," said in a statement on Thursday.

"Observers not only detected gravitational waves from a collision of two stars; they also saw the event at all wavelengths of light, from gamma rays all the way to radio. Being able to get the full picture of violent events like this promises to transform astrophysics, and that made this year's observation the clear Breakthrough for 2017," Appenzeller said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, December 22 2017. 16:40 IST