Multi-messenger astrophysics

The Two-Second Mystery: Hunting Fast Transients in the Earth’s Shadow


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In this episode, we explore the "fast transient" frontier of astronomy, where cosmic events last only seconds—or even less. We discuss a fascinating new paper from the Tomo-e Gozen survey, which used high-speed video sensors to stare into the Earth's shadow in search of elusive optical flashes.


We break down the discovery of TMG20200322, a mysterious optical transient that lasted less than two seconds. We analyze why the researchers ruled out common culprits like satellite glints, head-on meteors, and asteroid collisions. Finally, we discuss the strange, elongated shape of this object and what its discovery implies for the future of detecting optical counterparts to Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs).


Key Topics:

* The Unexplored Frontier: Why searching for transients on timescales of seconds is difficult and largely untouched.

* The Strategy: Using the Tomo-e Gozen camera to monitor the Earth’s shadow to avoid satellite interference.

* The Candidate: The detection of TMG20200322, a 16.8 magnitude flash detected in just two consecutive video frames.

* The Mystery: Why this event does not fit the profile of a meteor, a Near-Earth Asteroid impact, or atmospheric distortion.

* The Connection: How the event rate of these flashes compares to the mysterious population of Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs).




### Reference

Article: An optical transient candidate of $< \sim$ 2-second duration captured by wide-field video observations

Authors: Noriaki Arima, Mamoru Doi, Shigeyuki Sako, et al.

Journal: Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan (PASJ), Advance access publication, 2025.

DOI: 10.1093/pasj/xxx000


Acknowledements: Podcast prepared with Google/NotebookLM. Illustration credits: N. Arima et al.

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Multi-messenger astrophysicsBy Astro-COLIBRI