Like the flashbulbs of paparazzi,
gamma ray bursts pop off all the time in the universe; about one a day but their origin remains elusive.
Not exact matches
Like the flashbulbs of paparazzi,
gamma -
ray bursts pop off all the time in the universe, about one a day.
«But this new theory predicts that when you compare near - infrared and optical images of a short
gamma -
ray burst about a week after the blast, the kilonova should
pop out in the infrared, and that's exactly what we're seeing.»
Since the early 1970s, scientists had debated the nature of
gamma -
ray bursts, enigmatic flashes of energetic radiation that
pop off hundreds of times a year.