Nearby Supernova Causes Mass Extinction? 71
hcg50a writes "AP has a
story on Yahoo about a theory that a blast of gamma rays from a distant supernova destroyed the earth's ozone layer, allowing normally shielded intense UV radiation from the sun to kill life on earth. The second-largest extinction in the Earth's history, the killing of two-thirds of all species, may have been caused by ultraviolet radiation from the sun after gamma rays destroyed the Earth's ozone layer. Astronomers are proposing that a supernova exploded within 10,000 light years of the Earth, destroying the chemistry of the atmosphere and allowing the sun's ultraviolet rays to cook fragile, unprotected life forms."
Mars? (Score:3, Interesting)
(Rhetorical question - we can't really know)
Re:Mars? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Mars? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Mars? (Score:3, Informative)
Why? Atmospheres "boil away" when the molecules in the atmosphere are moving faster than the escape velocity of the planet. But while particles in a hot gases move faster than those in cooler sample fo the same gas, gases made up of heavy and/or complex molecules will have
Re:Mars? (Score:2)
Silly Dinosaurs... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Silly Dinosaurs... (Score:1)
Um, the dinosaurs went out 65 mya (million years ago) in the Cretaceous extinction. Dinosaurs first evolved some time after the Permian extinction, which was about 225 mya. The article talks about the Ordovician extinction, 440 mya, which was long before dinosaurs evolved; in fact it wasn not very long after multicellular life first evolved (560 mya).
Of course (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, but... (Score:2)
Re:Of course (Score:4, Informative)
IANAP, but as I understand it, our own sun is too small to go supernova.
Re:Of course (Score:5, Informative)
A few light-years is too close (Score:2)
Quite true, but a supernova is a really, really big bang. A star going supernova within a few light-years will cook us quite nicely. Sirius A, for example, is certainly large enough to supernova, and it's 8.6 light-years away. I don't have the numbers, but I strongly suspect that the gamma-ray flux from something that close would do a whole lot more than just hurt the ozone layer... not to mention the blast of particle radiation, moving at less
Re:A few light-years is too close (Score:2)
Sirius A, for example, is certainly large enough to supernova, and it's 8.6 light-years away.
Not according to any current theory of stellar evolution. Sirius A is spectral type A, which means a mass less than 3 solar masses. Anything under 8 solar masses won't go supernova, so Sirius A is destined for the boring end: expansion into a red giant, loss of envelope as a planetary nebula, and senescence as a white dwarf.
Where's the remains? (Score:1, Redundant)
Thanks.
The secret of the missing evidence (Score:3, Informative)
is in the article.
The galaxy has completed two rotations since the event, and given that the various components of the galaxy don't rotate perfectly synchronously, the remenant nebula is either not where you'd expect, or smeared out of all recognition.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Where's the remains? (Score:1)
Well, the theorists admittedly don't have any direct evidence.
There are other plausible scenarios that lead to an ice-age, not just NOx haze from nearby supernovae.
Still, the idea that a nearby supernova has actually triggered an ice-age is very intriguing.
Wow. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Wow. (Score:3, Interesting)
It appears that there are several factors for creating a 'potential life zone' in the galaxy.
Given our sample of one known case, we assume you need a Sun-like star, with an Earth-like planet in an Earth-like orbit, probably with an Earth-like moon. You also need outer gas giants to reduce the inbound crap that would otherwise beat the hell out of us. That's just the local stuff.
You also need to have a solar system that won't pass through a dangerous region of space while life is trying to evolve... that
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
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I've heard this cited before, but I don't get it. Jupiter may be really huge compared to Earth, but compared to all the possible approach vectors of "inbound crap", it's not worth mentioning. Am I missing something?
My understanding of gas giant roles (Score:2)
is insufficient to answer you with any authority.
However, I'll offer a guess or two - First, a gas giant will collect anything in a solar system's disk that is slowly spiralling inwards, as even if it isn't very close, it only has to pass close enough to perturb the path, drawing the object closer for the next pass. Second, (and this is a wild-ass guess) there may be other effects of a large gravitational field on chaotic structures (like asteroid belts?) that keep them dynamically stable and less likely
Re:Wow. (Score:2, Informative)
The problem is leftover crumbs of planetary formation-- asteroids, planetesimals, the assorted random junk that has been circling the sun as long as the Earth has. In our system, Jupiter had the effect of removing that junk from our vicinity. It consumed a lot of rocks, and flung others out of the system by the slingshot effect. The remaining ones got shepherded into their own fairly circular orb
Re:Wow. (Score:3, Interesting)
The biggest problem with the Drake Equation is that it it way too simplistic. In our galaxy, there is definitely a habitable zone [spacedaily.com] which the solar system is in. If it were much closer to the center of the galaxy, there would be too many events like energetic supernovae that would kill all life on the earth. If it were much farther away from the center, there would not be enough heavy elements to form earth-like planets.
Life is fragile and cannot tolerate too many nearby energetic events.
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
*cragen
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
Um, yes. We live in it.
'Zone' implies a boundary (Score:1)
"Zone" implies associating a boundary to a region. Therefore, the anthropic principle does not automatically resolve the issue of whether only part of the galaxy can support life.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
There isn't a habitable zone - there is a developmental zone. It's the region where intelligent live can evolve in the absence of energetic local events, but with sufficent heavy elements.
Once developed, life could certainly colonize worlds outside the so-called habitable zone quite easily.
So it may be correct to say the development of intelligent life is rare in the galaxy, but that still doesn't answer the conundrum of where THEY are - e
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
On the outside, you would either have to bring all your raw materials with you, or you would have to be able to manufacture them.
On the inside, you would have to bring sufficient shielding or construct it and reconstitute your environment when it got damaged.
Therefore, I think the habitable zone shrinks down to the developmental zone in practice.
There's not really a conundrum of where THEY are: THEY are few and
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
On the inside, you would have to bring sufficient shielding or construct it and reconstitute your environment when it got damaged.
Considering that we are talking about a civilization with the hypothetical technology to routinely colinize 10's of billions of starts in the "habitable zone", neither of yourobjections seems particularly troublesome.
As for building in an enviornmen
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
Dr Fish
Our aversion to going outside... (Score:4, Funny)
reported on in 2003 (Score:3, Informative)
And here the link to the pre print [arxiv.org].
No Real Evidence yet... (Score:4, Interesting)
The article clearly states that they have no real evidence to speak of. The only thing they do have is the ice age that occured at the time of the extintion. They admit that no traces of a supernova near earth can be found, and blame it on the rotation of the Milky way.
Melott said there is no known evidence of such a nearby supernova, but that in 440 million years the Milky Way would have rotated almost twice and traces of the explosion could have been moved during that time.
I will give them that it is a possibility, but until they have some more convencing evidence I'm not ready to jump aboard.
Re:No Real Evidence yet... (Score:3, Interesting)
A very good what-if book on GRBs (Score:2)
is Greg Egan's Diaspora, in which a gamma-ray burst in a nearby pair of neutron stars lays down some heavy spank on Planet Earth. The predicted/imagined effects are pretty-well thought out, and would make for a stunning series of special effects.
There's a references section at the end, which lists some nonfiction texts concerning GRBs and the possibilities of their existence.
Evolution? (Score:4, Interesting)
Increased exposure to radiation causing a period of increased mutations in the surviving species?
Re: Evolution? (Score:4, Insightful)
> Could it also be a factor in Evolution? Increased exposure to radiation causing a period of increased mutations in the surviving species?
The opportunities for species to radiate into vacated niches would probably have a much bigger evolutionary impact than the effects of a short-term boost in mutation rates.
Re: Evolution? (Score:2)
Example: A species with a longer neck can more successfully get food (leaves) from higher branches, but something had to cause the longer neck in the first place.
I like Dawkin's definition of life : The non-random survival of random self-replicators.
In the random self-replication process, an absence of genetic mutation would not allow
Re:Evolution? (Score:1)
I remain unconvinced (Score:1, Funny)
Where's the Ka-Boom!?!? (Score:3, Funny)
Very possible (Score:2)
BBQ! (Score:2)
Re:BBQ! (Score:1)
if only 2/3rds, then what about what is left? (Score:1)
If that is the case, then they would have some protection strategy towards UV - are those animals currently still here? Humans sure as hell don't have that protection.
And is that number only considering land/air based creatures - would it have any impact on sea life?
It just would seem that if the ones that could survive the UV
Re:if only 2/3rds, then what about what is left? (Score:1)
We don't see evidence of land animals until later in the Devonian period. You should actually read this article. It does answer your question more or less.
Re:if only 2/3rds, then what about what is left? (Score:2)
Re:if only 2/3rds, then what about what is left? (Score:1)
the next big one primed & feisty (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:the next big one primed & feisty (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Protection from the other side of the Earth. (Score:2)
The problem is you'd never know when it was coming. The gamma rays travel at the speed of light, so the first time you know the supernova has happened is the same time the radiation hits you.
Re:Protection from the other side of the Earth. (Score:3, Interesting)
As someone else has already pointed out, this moves at lightspeed, so there's no warning. You do realize there's not enough jets/planes to even hold 0.00001 of humanity, and the real problem would be trying to outrun our own daytime as the earth is baked by our own sun. You think people will wait nicely in
Anthropocentric view (Score:1)
This is a scenario that has appeared in science fiction before in, for example, Charles Sheffield's Aftermath and Starfire.
What sticks in my mind is the thought that on a cosmic scale, these things happen. Whether it's meteor strikes, runaway greenhouse effects, or nearby supernovae, the universe/mother nature doesn't care. The universe is a scary place. It's just that we're around to complain about it now.