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Vela Satellites

All articles tagged with #vela satellites

Vela Bursts: From Cold War Detectors to Cosmic Gamma-Ray Explosions
science4 days ago

Vela Bursts: From Cold War Detectors to Cosmic Gamma-Ray Explosions

NASA’s Vela satellites, built to monitor nuclear tests, began registering puzzling gamma-ray flashes in the late 1960s. Initially ambiguous, sixteen bursts were later identified as cosmic gamma-ray bursts, not terrestrial or solar events. Distance estimates remained contested until BeppoSAX pinpointed afterglows in 1997, proving GRBs originate billions of light-years away and transforming gamma-ray astronomy.

From Nuclear Watchdogs to Cosmic Fireworks: The Vela Satellites That Sparked Gamma-Ray Astronomy
space9 days ago

From Nuclear Watchdogs to Cosmic Fireworks: The Vela Satellites That Sparked Gamma-Ray Astronomy

The Vela satellites, built to detect secret nuclear tests, recorded a mysterious 1967 gamma-ray flash that didn’t fit terrestrial or solar sources, initiating gamma-ray burst research. Over time, improved timing allowed precise localization, establishing bursts as cosmic in origin. BeppoSAX’s 1997 afterglow localizations linked bursts to distant galaxies and revealed two main classes—short bursts from compact mergers and long bursts from collapsing massive stars—while extraordinary events like GRB 221009A in 2022 showed bursts can outshine almost all prior records, marking gamma-ray bursts as a central field in high-energy astrophysics.