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To: TaraP
If it exploded, it happened 15 years ago.

No worries for a Gamma Ray burst though, yes?

5 posted on 06/10/2009 9:19:33 PM PDT by LdSentinal
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To: LdSentinal

Make that 600 years ago.


9 posted on 06/10/2009 9:21:43 PM PDT by LdSentinal
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To: LdSentinal

If it exploded 15 years ago, we have discovered the source of “Climate Change”


17 posted on 06/10/2009 9:25:27 PM PDT by Tuketu (Declaring Omaha Beach "Obama Beach" is a desecration, Mr. Brown.)
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To: LdSentinal

I am sorry but it happened about 600 years ago. The average distance to it is 639 LY but some scientist say about 500 some say a thousand. Let’s go with the 600 Light years, which means anything that we observe with this star happened 600 years ago(+/- 100 or so years). At any rate it has either blown up or not a long time ago!


56 posted on 06/10/2009 10:09:34 PM PDT by calex59
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To: LdSentinal
No worries for a Gamma Ray burst though, yes?

Only if we have a bad break and get caught by a focused "jet" of the explosion, I believe... but I plan to be LONG, GONE by then, so it won't be my problem.

Gamma rays may have devastated life on Earth

A devastating burst of gamma rays may have caused one of Earth's worst mass extinctions, 443 million years ago.

A team of astrophysicists and palaeontologists says the pattern of trilobite extinctions at that time resembles the expected effects of a nearby gamma-ray burst (GRB). Although other experts have greeted the idea with some scepticism, most agree that it deserves further investigation.

GRBs are the most powerful explosions known. As giant stars collapse into black holes at the end of their lives, they fire incredibly intense pulses of gamma rays from their poles that can be detected even from across the universe for 10 seconds or so.

All the bursts astronomers have recorded so far have come from distant galaxies and been harmless on the ground, but if one occurred within our galaxy and was aimed straight at us, the effects could be devastating, according to astrophysicist Adrian Melott of the University of Kansas in Lawrence.

The Earth's atmosphere would soak up most of the gamma rays, Melott says, but their energy would rip apart nitrogen and oxygen molecules, creating a witch's brew of nitrogen oxides, especially the toxic brown gas nitrogen dioxide that colours photochemical smog (see graphic).

Melott estimates that a burst would produce enough of the gas to darken the sky, blotting out half the visible sunlight reaching the Earth. Nitrogen dioxide would also destroy the ozone layer, exposing surface life to a dangerous overdose of ultraviolet radiation from the sun for a year or more until the ozone recovered.

Plankton layer

The idea that GRBs could have affected the course of evolution was first suggested two years ago (New Scientist print edition, 15 December 2001, p 10). John Scalo and Craig Wheeler of the University of Texas at Austin estimated that GRBs close enough to affect life in some way might occur once every five million years or so - around a thousand times since life began.

Now Melott believes he has palaeontological evidence that this actually happened at the end of the Ordovician period 443 million years ago, causing one of the five largest extinctions of the past 500 million years. Working with Bruce Lieberman, a specialist in fossil trilobites also at the University of Kansas, and other colleagues, he looked at the pattern of extinctions in the late Ordovician.


79 posted on 06/10/2009 10:44:36 PM PDT by BP2 (I think, therefore I'm a conservative)
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