In October last year, astronomers detected the 'most-powerful ever' gamma-ray burst shockingly close to Earth. According to NASA, a gamma-ray burst (GRB) is a short-lived burst of gamma-ray light, which is the most energetic form of light. Although these bursts are short-lived, they shine a million trillion times as bright as the Sun. The gamma-ray burst observed on October 9 was so powerful that scientists initially thought it came from a source not too distant from Earth, and it lit up gamma-ray detectors on telescopes around the world.
Instead, it was a terrifyingly powerful explosion of gamma-rays from a source further away than they had previously assumed and was renamed GRB221009A. Now, researchers have finally combed through all the data and have revealed that it was the brightest GRB ever and nearly 70 times brighter than any other such eruption ever observed. The GRB has earned the nickname BOAT, ''brightest of all time.''
According to a NASA blog, Eric Burns, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge said, ''GRB 221009A was likely the brightest burst at X-ray and gamma-ray energies to occur since human civilization began.''
Burns led a research team which analyzed over 7000 GRBs to establish how frequently events this bright may occur. Most of the GRBs observed were detected by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and the Russian Konus instrument on NASA's Wind spacecraft. The research revealed that such a bright event occurs every 10000 years.
According to NASA, the gamma-ray burst was so bright it almost blinded most gamma-ray instruments in space, which means the real intensity of the emission could not be recorded. Instead, U.S. scientists were able to
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