. Energy News .




.
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Fear Not A Supernova 2012
by Staff Writers
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Dec 19, 2011

For Earth's ozone layer to experience damage from a supernova, the blast must occur less than 50 light-years away. All of the nearby stars capable of going supernova are much farther than this.

Given the incredible amounts of energy in a supernova explosion - as much as the Sun creates during its entire lifetime - another erroneous doomsday theory is that such an explosion could happen in 2012 and harm life on Earth.

However, given the vastness of space and the long times between supernovae, astronomers can say with certainty that there is no threatening star close enough to hurt Earth.

Astronomers estimate that, on average, about one or two supernovae explode each century in our galaxy. But for Earth's ozone layer to experience damage from a supernova, the blast must occur less than 50 light-years away. All of the nearby stars capable of going supernova are much farther than this.

Any planet with life on it near a star that goes supernova would indeed experience problems. X- and gamma-ray radiation from the supernova could damage the ozone layer, which protects us from harmful ultraviolet light in the sun's rays.

The less ozone there is, the more UV light reaches the surface. At some wavelengths, just a 10 percent increase in ground-level UV can be lethal to some organisms, including phytoplankton near the ocean surface.

Because these organisms form the basis of oxygen production on Earth and the marine food chain, any significant disruption to them could cascade into a planet-wide problem.

Another explosive event, called a gamma-ray burst (GRB), is often associated with supernovae. When a massive star collapses on itself - or, less frequently, when two compact neutron stars collide - the result is the birth of a black hole.

As matter falls toward a nascent black hole, some of it becomes accelerated into a particle jet so powerful that it can drill its way completely through the star before the star's outermost layers even have begun to collapse.

If one of the jets happens to be directed toward Earth, orbiting satellites detect a burst of highly energetic gamma rays somewhere in the sky. These bursts occur almost daily and are so powerful that they can be seen across billions of light-years.

A gamma-ray burst could affect Earth in much the same way as a supernova - and at much greater distance - but only if its jet is directly pointed our way.

Astronomers estimate that a gamma-ray burst could affect Earth from up to 10,000 light-years away with each separated by about 15 million years, on average. So far, the closest burst on record, known as GRB 031203, was 1.3 billion light-years away.

As with impacts, our planet likely has already experienced such events over its long history, but there's no reason to expect a gamma-ray burst in our galaxy to occur in the near future, much less in December 2012.

Related Links
-
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Hubble Images Help Pin Down ID of Supernova Companion
Berkeley CA (SPX) Dec 19, 2011
In August, as amateurs and professionals alike turned their telescopes on the nearest Type Ia supernova discovered in decades, University of California, Berkeley, research astronomer Weidong Li focused instead on what could not be seen. Li pulled up images of the northern sky taken over the past nine years by the Hubble Space telescope in hopes of seeing the supernova's "progenitor" star, but hi ... read more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY
China to launch country's first high-resolution mapping satellite for civil purposes

SMOS detects freezing soil as winter takes grip

NASA Gears Up for Airborne Study of Earth's Radiation Balance

Study Shows More Shrubbery in a Warming World

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
GIS Degree A Safe Bet for Professionals in the Ever-Growing Oil Industry

Lockheed Martin Delivers GPS 3 Pathfinder Satellite to Denver on Schedule

Galileo in tune as first navigation signal transmitted to Earth

Glonass satnav system targets Latin America and India

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
The case of the dying aspens

Little headway in Durban on deforestation: experts

Climate change blamed for dead trees in Africa

Ecologists fume as Brazil Senate OKs forestry reform

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Chemicals and biofuel from wood biomass

Turning Pig Manure into Oil Fosters Sustainability in a Crowded World

US Biofuel Camelina Production Set to Soar

Switchgrass as bioenergy feedstock

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Recurrent Energy Secures $250M Financing For 200MW of Solar PV Projects

Google turns up investment in solar power

Discovery of a 'dark state' could mean a brighter future for solar energy

Government 'strangling' homeowners' efforts to go solar

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Iowa State engineers study how hills, nearby turbines affect wind energy production

More than twenty UK wind farm sites adopt Natural Power's ForeSite wind forecasting service

Lawrence Livermore ramps up wind energy research

Campbell Scientific selects ZephIR wind lidar technology for US wind market

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Gloucester, Yanzhou in giant $8bn coal play: report

Four trapped miners found dead in China: Govt

Five rescued from collapsed Chinese mine

Coal mine collapse traps 12 in China

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Communist official heads to China protest village

China villagers warned against protest march

Police in China fire tear-gas, beat protesters: witnesses

China puts rights lawyer back in jail: Xinhua


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement