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Author Topic: Brightest Galactic Flash Ever Detected Hits Earth  (Read 3524 times)

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Offline blobrana

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Re: Brightest Galactic Flash Ever Detected Hits Earth
« on: February 19, 2005, 01:35:40 PM »
Yes it’s possible,
though the probability is very low that one or more large asteroids impacting at the same time as increased volcanic activity coincided with a very rare star quake (there are only four other known neutron stars which are classed both as an ultra-magnetic magnetar and as a soft gamma repeater)…

Supernova are a bit more common, but they leave the tell tale signature of iron-60, so their influence on the earth can be traced, (intrestingly, the last time was about 3 million years ago – roughly about the time of the emergence of humans and climatic change)

As a side note, The nearest concern is the star Betelgeuse, at about ~520 light years away, it will go supernova within a few million years (may happen tommorow though).

 520 light years is probably far enough away that earth would be safe.
It would only be as bright as the moon.
A supernova exploding 25- 50 light-years would most likely be fatal to all life on Earth …

Aren’t you glad you live in the galactic outer-suburbs…

Offline blobrana

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Re: Boom!
« Reply #1 on: February 26, 2005, 07:04:27 PM »

Hum,
>>friendly red giant?

I suspect you weren’t around when the volatile star pack known as the Scorpius-Centaurus OB Association passed near the solar system several million years ago....

The next member of the gang expected to go supernova is Antares

Good riddance