Gamma-ray burst

/ˈɡæmə reɪ bɜrst/ noun

Definition

The most energetic electromagnetic events in the universe, consisting of intense flashes of gamma radiation that can last from milliseconds to several minutes. They are thought to be produced by the collapse of massive stars or the merger of neutron stars.

Etymology

From 'gamma ray' (named by Rutherford in 1903, third letter of Greek alphabet) and 'burst' from Old English berstan 'to break suddenly'. First detected by military satellites in 1967, the term became standard in astrophysics by the 1970s.

Kelly Says

A single gamma-ray burst releases more energy in seconds than our Sun will produce in its entire 10-billion-year lifetime! If one occurred in our galaxy within 6,000 light-years, it could potentially cause a mass extinction on Earth by destroying the ozone layer.

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.