大象传媒

Home
News
Space research

Extraordinary shakings of a distant magnetar

The ASIM instrument aboard the International Space Station was the only instrument out of seven which detected the giant flare and recorded the main burst phase without being blinded by the giant flash of high energy which saturated the other six detectors at the time of the maximum emission.

Magnetar
Extraordinary shakings of a distant magnetar. Illustration: Birkeland Centre for Space Science and Mount Visual.
Photo:
Birkelandsenteret for romforskning og Mount Visual

Main content

After a very long journey through space, a burst of high-energy radiation was detected by the instrument aboard the International Space Station (ISS) on April 15, 2020. The origin of this energetic burst was found to be a giant flare from an extremely magnetized neutron star known as a magnetar, located more than 10 million light years away in the galaxy NGC 253.

Extremely rare

鈥淒etections of giant flares from magnetars are extremely rare鈥, explains Alberto J. Castro-Tirado (Institute of Astrophysics of Andaluc铆a, CSIC, Spain). 鈥淭he burst on April 15 was the first conclusive detection of a magnetar giant flare since 2004. In just a sixth of a second, the flare released an energy comparable to what the Sun radiates in 100.000 years鈥.

In a groundbreaking study [Castro-Tirado, 脴stgaard, G枚臒眉艧 et al., 2021] published in the latest issue of Nature, the authors (including 8 researchers from BCSS) report 鈥 for the first time 鈥 the fine structure of the main burst phase of a magnetar. 鈥淒uring the initial hard spike, two prominent, high-frequency Quasi-Periodic Oscillations (QPOs) are observed鈥, says Ersin G枚臒眉艧 (Sabanc谋 University, Turkey). 鈥淭his will likely be a game-changer in our understanding of magnetar giant flares鈥, adds Castro-Tirado.

QPOs in the high-energy emission can be the signature of oscillations either in the magnetic field surrounding the neutron star, or in the matter of the star itself, probably following a catastrophic event on the star called 鈥榮tarquake鈥. 鈥淯nderstanding these oscillations can shed light on the structure of these mysterious objects鈥 states Michael Gabler (University of Valencia, Spain).

Sensitive ASIM electronics

According to Kjetil Ullaland (BCSS and UiB, Norway), the remarkable findings 鈥渨ere possible due to ASIM鈥檚 large effective area and high time resolution鈥. The sensitive ASIM electronics have further allowed the authors to perform detailed temporal and spectral investigations of the main phases of the giant flare.

鈥淏ased on the temporal structure and energy distribution, we distinguish four distinct phases during the flare鈥, says Martino Marisaldi (BCSS and UiB, Norway). 鈥淪udden spectral variations found in such a short time scale provide yet another crucial insight into the puzzle鈥.

鈥淪everal papers about the April 15 burst have already been published, using data from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, Konus WIND, and the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission鈥, says second-author and BCSS leader Nikolai 脴stgaard. 鈥淗owever, as ASIM was the only mission that detected the main burst phase in the entire energy range of photons without saturation, it puts the ASIM instrument in a unique position to unveil some of the secrets surrounding magnetars鈥.