
Copernical Team
Ingenuity Mars Helicopter transitions to stationary role on Red Planet

International Collaboration Boosts Planetary Defense Efforts with Hera Mission

New insights on the young ice deposits of Ceres

NASA Goddard to Build Quake Detector for Artemis III Moon Landing

Comet Geyser: Perseverance's 24th Rock Core

NASA seeks community input to refine space technology priorities

Ariane 6 debut includes Portugal's first university CubeSat for aircraft tracking

Boeing Starliner rolls to Cape Canaveral Space Force Station ahead of May launch

BioNutrients-3 yields fresh kefir in lunar analog mission

Citizen science project classifying gamma-ray bursts

When faraway stars explode, they send out flashes of energy called gamma-ray bursts that are bright enough that telescopes back on Earth can detect them. Studying these pulses, which can also come from mergers of some exotic astronomical objects such as black holes and neutron stars, can help astronomers like me understand the history of the universe.
Space telescopes detect on average one gamma-ray burst per day, adding to thousands of bursts detected throughout the years, and a community of volunteers are making research into these bursts possible.
On Nov. 20, 2004, NASA launched the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, also known as Swift. Swift is a multiwavelength space telescope that scientists are using to find out more about these mysterious gamma-ray flashes from the universe.
Gamma-ray bursts usually last for only a very short time, from a few seconds to a few minutes, and the majority of their emission is in the form of gamma rays, which are part of the light spectrum that our eyes cannot see.