Trisha Shetty (Editor)

GRB 050509B

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Other designations
  
GRB 050509B

Date
  
9 May 2005

Constellation
  
Coma Berenices

Event type
  
Gamma-ray burst

Duration
  
40±4 millisecond

GRB 050509B

Instrument
  
Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission

GRB 050509B was a gamma ray burst (GRB) observed by the NASA Swift satellite on May 9, 2005. It was the first short duration GRB for which an accurate positional measurement was made, accurate enough to locate it near to an elliptical galaxy lying at a redshift of 0.225.

The significance of this finding is that it lends support to the theory that short bursts are formed during the catastrophic merger of two neutron stars, or a neutron star and a black hole. The orbital decay (via gravitational radiation) of stellar binaries consisting of these exotic compact objects is believed to take hundreds of millions of years, hence gamma ray bursts produced this way would be expected to be located in old (misleadingly called "early type") galaxies. In contrast, long-duration gamma ray bursts, which are believed to result from the collapse of a single massive star, are expected to be located preferentially in young galaxies.

References

GRB 050509B Wikipedia