Infinite in All Directions: Shock Diamonds, Gorakhpur’s Pestilence, Slow Magnetars

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Shock diamonds

Credit: ISRO

This is a picture of the GSLV F05 mission taking off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, on September 5. If you look closely below the four liquid boosters strapped to the first stage, there are a series of bright spots flanking the main exhaust. I figured these were some kind of vortices until Prateep Basu (who cohosted a live chat on the occasion of the launch for The Wire) corrected me.

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They are called shock diamonds – spots of burning gas surrounded by non-burning material. The phenomenon manifests when unburnt gas exiting the engine accumulates in spots of higher pressure, becoming compressed and reignited by the high temperature in these regions.

Shock diamonds form under specific conditions: