Undated handout artist impression issued by Liverpool John Moores University of a beam of intense radiation produced by a cosmic explosion Expand

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Undated handout artist impression issued by Liverpool John Moores University of a beam of intense radiation produced by a cosmic explosion

Undated handout artist impression issued by Liverpool John Moores University of a beam of intense radiation produced by a cosmic explosion

Undated handout artist impression issued by Liverpool John Moores University of a beam of intense radiation produced by a cosmic explosion

A cosmic explosion two billion light years from Earth that blinded space instruments may be the brightest ever seen, astronomers have said.

The blast produced a pulse of intense radiation that swept through the solar system last October, triggering detectors on multiple spacecraft.

Scientists said this type of event is a gamma-ray burst (GRB) – known for being some of the strongest and brightest explosions in the universe.

This GRB was deemed so exceptional that astronomers have said it is the brightest of all time since the beginning of human civilisation.

The researchers said the event, dubbed GRB 221009A, blinded most gamma-ray instruments in space.

This meant astronomers could not measure the real intensity of the emission and had to reconstruct its energy expenditure from past and present data.

An analysis of 7,000 GRBs suggests that GRB 221009A is 70 times brighter than any yet seen and an event like this occurs once every 10,000 years.

Dr Dan Perley, of the Astrophysics Research Institute at Liverpool John Moores University, who followed the event with the University’s Liverpool Telescope on the Spanish island of La Palma, said: “There is nothing in human experience that comes anywhere remotely close to such an outpouring of energy. Nothing.”

Though they last mere seconds, GRBs produce as much energy as the sun will emit during its entire lifetime.

Dr Perley said the event produced “a phenomenal amount of energy”, adding: “It’s certainly the highest value ever recorded for a gamma-ray burst.”

Astronomers believe GRB 221009A is a result of a massive star collapsing in on itself to form a black hole.

Dr Perley said: “The star would have been many times more massive than the sun, probably 20 times as massive or more.”

GRBs also produce a supernova but astronomers are yet to ascertain whether that occurred in this case.

It is thought that GRB 221009A was so bright because it was much closer to Earth compared with other known GRBs and the beam of electromagnetic radiation happened to be pointing in the direction of the planet.
The findings are reported in two separate papers in the Astrophysical Journal and Astrophysical Journal Letters.