.
Latest News

Gamma ray burst may strike again

Sunday, April 5, 2009 , Posted by AME at 11:27 PM

A brilliant burst of gamma ray killed most of the creatures on Earth some 440 million years ago, and researchers say, a similar celestial
catastrophe could happen again. Most gamma-ray bursts are thought to be streams of high-energy radiation produced when the core of a very massive star collapses. The new computer model shows that a gamma-ray burst aimed at Earth could deplete the ozone layer, cause acid rain, and initiate a round of global cooling from as far as 6,500 light-years away, reports National Geographic News.
Such a disaster may have been responsible for the mass die-off of 70% of the marine creatures that thrived during the Ordovician period (488 to 443 million years ago), suggests study leader Brian Thomas, an astrophysicist at Washburn University in Kansas. The simulation also shows that a significant gamma-ray burst is likely to go off within range of Earth every billion years or so, although the stream of radiation would have to be lined up just right to affect the planet. Currently WR104, a massive star 8,000 light-years away, is in position to be a potential threat, Thomas noted. But the study, which has been submitted to the International Journal of Astrobiology, isn’t necessarily sending other astrophysicists into a panic. “There is certainly no harm in looking at what a gamma-ray burst might do if it were close enough to us, as this author has done. That’s the way science works,” said David Thompson, a Nasa astrophysicist and deputy project director on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.