VUB finds “gigantic particle accelerator” in Milky Way

Summary

Astrophysicists at the VUB have discovered that our own galaxy is producing high-energy particles, which were always assumed to have travelled here from other galaxies

One million times stronger

The Milky Way galaxy seems to contain a gigantic particle accelerator, probably in the form of an enormous star. That is the discovery of a research team at the Free University of Brussels (VUB), led by astrophysicist Stijn Buitink. Their findings are published in the science magazine Nature.

The cosmos is full of flying objects, from comets to elementary particles, and some particles possess an energy that is a million times stronger than the largest particle accelerator on Earth. Scientists generally believed that they came from sources very far away, like black holes in other galaxies.

The VUB researchers, in collaboration with the Dutch Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, have now found that there are also particles with such extreme energy produced in the Milky Way, the galaxy that contains our solar system.

“We think our galaxy contains a very powerful particle accelerator, most likely in the form of a gigantic star,” said professor Buitink in a statement. The particles travel through the universe at about the speed of light, until they hit the Earth’s atmosphere and shatter into numerous smaller particles. Through interaction with the Earth’s magnetic field, this process causes a very short flash.

The scientists measured flashes with the European radio telescope LOFAR and ascertained the causes of the impacts. In most cases, the cause is a single proton or a light atomic nucleus, coming from hydrogen or helium atoms. According to the scientists, the particles could form excellent research material for further research into particle physics.

Photo: Galaxy NGC 6744, which scientists believe resembles the Milky Way

About the author

No comments

Add comment

Log in or register to post comments

Free University of Brussels (VUB)

The VUB was established as a spin-off of the French-speaking Université Libre de Bruxelles in the 1960s. It’s an internationally oriented and liberal institution, and the only Dutch-speaking university in the capital.
Work - The VUB is the largest Dutch-speaking employer of the Brussels-Capital Region.
St V - Every year, students honour university founder Pierre Theodore Verhaegen in a festive, booze-filled “St V” march through the city.
Campus - The VUB is the only Dutch-speaking university with a small, American-style green campus.
68

Master’s programmes offered

70

million euros in research budget in 2010

12 000

students in 2011-2012 academic year

  • Free University of Brussels
  • Study in Flanders
  • Universitaire Associatie Brussel