Tuesday, February 13, 2007

What Powers Gamma Ray Bursters?

As it says on this link ("Why is the Universe's Brightest Blast Still Blazing?" New Scientist 4 08) beliefs of science about gamma ray bursters rely on jets to explain the otherwise high energy levels of these explosions. But this explanation failed with this weeks observations because the jets of most explosions were believed to lose power when they hit the plasma around the expansion. A more massive gamma ray source is believed to lose power more rapidly than the lower energy ones, and this is the most powerful and it's been burning longer than most. And without higher power jets beaming in our line of sight just to us to explain the more concentrated radiation source, they can't explain what powers this huge explosion, the most massive seen in the cosmos (other than the Big Bang.). One problem this model of the bursters has is about the jets being aimed to us, I've never read of any gamma ray bursters that blink on and off. The supposed source of the gamma ray bursters is a massive star. Almost any star has rotation with the jets at a bit of an angle to the poles, so it would seem at least some of the gamma ray sources would blink on and off.


As I say on this link about the possiblity of a fifth and sixth force, the jets of galaxies are too massive and too fast to be explained by fusion, I think this may be explained by a fifth and sixth force (the sixth force is the reaction pair to the fifth force by Newton's Law of action reaction pairs). This would also offer a way out for the power source of the bursters. While most smaller stars would just have fusion, only the more massive stars combined with the most powerful implosion would be energetic enough to cause the ignition of the explosion outward. This power source I call superfusion. Please see the link "Fifth and Sixth Force" for my complete explanation of how this could be so.
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