Earth Safe from Cosmic Explosions



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "Sam Wormley"
Date: 12 Apr 2006 10:17:08 PM
Object: Earth Safe from Cosmic Explosions
Earth Safe from Cosmic Explosions
http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/412/1
By Govert Schilling
ScienceNOW Daily News
12 April 2006
Mankind is safe--at least from the devastating, destructive power of
long-lasting gamma-ray bursts (GBR). Although these powerful cosmic
flashes pack more energy than the sun will release in its entire
10-billion-year lifetime, astronomers have concluded that our Milky
Way galaxy has enough metal to preclude such a detonation.
A long gamma-ray burst, which lasts a few seconds to tens of minutes,
is the birth cry of a black hole, produced when a massive, whirling
star explodes as a supernova (ScienceNOW, 5 October 2005). Just about
every day, a long burst flares up, usually in a remote galaxy.
Astronomers had assumed that thousands of them must have lit up in
the Milky Way over the past few billion years, and perhaps close
enough to Earth to pelt it with lethal radiation. So could they have
caused mass extinctions?
No, says Krzysztof Stanek, an astronomer at Ohio State University in
Columbus. He and colleagues analyzed four long-duration gamma-ray
bursts that lit up nearby galaxies, including one detected by NASA's
Swift satellite on 18 February this year. All four galaxies contained
almost no "metals"--astronomical parlance for atoms heavier than
hydrogen and helium that are produced over the eons by stellar
evolution. Apparently, long bursts only occur in pristine galaxies.
This observation nicely fits in with theories saying metal-rich stars
lose too much mass and rotational punch during their lives to blow up
as gamma-ray bursts when they die.
According to Stanek and his team, by the time the sun and Earth
formed, our Milky Way galaxy was already metal-rich enough not to
host any long gamma-ray bursts. In a paper submitted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journal, they write: "We can probably cross GRBs
off the rather long list of things that could cause humankind to
'join the dinosaurs' on the extinct species list."
"It's a reasonable argument," says physicist Adrian Melott of the
University of Kansas, Lawrence, who has suggested that the mass
extinction at the end of the Ordovician period, 443 million years
ago, was caused by a gamma-ray burst. Still, he thinks Stanek's
conclusions may be a bit too strong. After all, every few hundred
million years or so the Milky Way gobbles up a dwarf galaxy that's
poor in metals, he says, and those might still produce long gamma-ray
bursts.
So is mankind safe from gamma-ray bursts? Maybe not. But, says
Melott, "I don't lie awake worrying about this.
Ref: http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/412/1
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