homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Astronomers identify the 514 most powerful objects in the Universe - they don't know what 65 of them are

The Fermi Space Telescope has catalogued the 514 most powerful objects in the Universe, that we know of. Astrophysicists don’t know what over 10% of them are. Why 514?   The idea was to catalog the objects which emit γ-ray sources at energies above 10 GeV. What’s a GeV? It stands for Giga electronvolt, which […]

Mihai Andrei
July 2, 2013 @ 8:36 am

share Share

The Fermi Space Telescope has catalogued the 514 most powerful objects in the Universe, that we know of. Astrophysicists don’t know what over 10% of them are.

Why 514?

 

fermi The idea was to catalog the objects which emit γ-ray sources at energies above 10 GeV. What’s a GeV? It stands for Giga electronvolt, which is 1 billion electronvolts. Aha, you may ask, but what’s an electonvolt? It’s a unit of energy, much like the Joule, except it’s much smaller (approximately 1.6×10−19 joules in 1 eV).

This energy range has not really been thoroughly studied – so the idea was to take all the objects in the known universe and separate those which are the most powerful energy sources.

“The idea is to have some sort of bridge catalogue between the typical catalogue done by Fermi… which contains thousands of sources, and the domain of the Cerenkov telescopes that have been operating over 20 years,” lead author of the new catalogue, David Paneque of the Max Planck Institute for Physics in Munich, Germany, explained.

But, as always with this kind of study, they also stumbled upon “unassociated sources”. So what are these unknown objects?

“What that means is that we know it’s a gamma-ray source, but we don’t know what kind of source,” he explained. “We can’t associate it with a radio object, with an optical object. It might be actually a new class of object – something that only emits in gamma rays.”

They could be things like dwarf galaxies composed of dark matter – things we don’t really know about, and astrophysicists would love to know more of. It could be unidentified quasars, but if this is the case, why haven’t astronomers identified them already?

Either way, something interesting will pop up – even if it’s only a small fraction, it’s more than enough to stir up an astronomic curiosity.

Original research

share Share

Scientists Take "Baby Picture" of the Infant Universe and Then Weigh It. Here's What Its First 380,000 Years Tell Us

If today's Universe were an adult human, at 380,000 years old it would be only a few hours old.

Astronomers thought mini-Neptunes had atmospheres with water or hydrogen. This one has neither

Shrouded in haze and mystery, GJ 1214b has finally begun to reveal its secrets.

Stunning close-up views of scorching hot Mercury may surprisingly reveal ice in its craters

ESA and JAXA's BepiColombo mission recently completed its last flyby of Mercury, revealing stunning details about the planet's volcanic plains and icy craters.

NASA spots Christmas "tree" and "wreath" in the cosmos

NASA has captured the holiday spirit in space with stunning images of NGC 602 and NGC 2264.

A Huge, Lazy Black Hole Is Redefining the Early Universe

Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have discovered a massive, dormant black hole from just 800 million years after the Big Bang.

Proba-3: The Budget Mission That Creates Solar Eclipses on Demand

Now scientists won't have to travel from one place to another to observe solar eclipses. They can create their own eclipses lasting for hours.

The Universe’s Structure May Be 'Smoother' Than Expected, Raising Big Questions for the Standard Model of Cosmology

We may be on the cusp of finally breaking the standard model of cosmology.

Scientists find the biggest black hole jets — "we are talking about 140 Milky Way diameters"

Talk about a giant in the universe.

NASA researchers find two black holes heading for a merger in our cosmic neighborhood

This is the closest pair detected in the local universe using multiwavelength (visible and X-ray light) observations.

Cosmology is at a tipping point – we may be on the verge of discovering new physics

For the past few years, a series of controversies have rocked the well-established field of cosmology. In a nutshell, the predictions of the standard model of the universe appear to be at odds with some recent observations. There are heated debates about whether these observations are biased, or whether the cosmological model, which predicts the […]