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NASA Reveals Extinction Event

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About once a day, something remarkable happens: the sky is lit up by a brilliant flash of energy. For a fleeting few seconds, this mysterious burst – coming from a seemingly random direction, different every time – ranks among the brightest objects in the sky.

Among the first 500 gamma-ray bursts detected by Swift is GRB 090429B, currently the farthest explosion ever detected and a candidate for the most distant object in the universe.  GRB 090429B hit the Earth directly, but was too distant to have a noticeable effect.  However in the distant past, this was not the case theorize some scientists. And in the future, it could happen again, without notice or warning, to devastating effect for all of life on Earth. 


NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Swift

Scientists at NASA and the University of Kansas say that a mass extinction on Earth hundreds of millions of years ago could have been triggered by a star explosion called a gamma-ray burst. The scientists do not have direct evidence that such a burst activated the ancient extinction. The strength of their work is their atmospheric modeling — essentially a “what if” scenario.

A gamma ray burst enveloping the earth in this artist’s depiction. 
Credit: NASA
 
The scientists calculated that gamma-ray radiation from a relatively nearby star explosion, hitting the Earth for only ten seconds, could deplete up to half of the atmosphere’s protective ozone layer. Recovery could take at least five years. With the ozone layer damaged, ultraviolet radiation from the Sun could kill much of the life on land and near the surface of oceans and lakes, and disrupt the food chain.

Gamma-ray bursts longer than two seconds are caused by the collapse of a rapidly rotating massive star at the end of its life. As the star collapses, jets of parti-cles and gamma radiation produced by a newborn black hole blast in opposite directions from the stellar core. Scientists think the Earth was hit square on by the jet produced by a gamma ray burst such as shown here. 
Credit: NASA/Swift/Cruz deWilde


Yet few have ever witnessed such a flash directly: the energy comes almost entirely in the form of gamma rays, which human eyes cannot detect. Even if our eyes were sensitive to this extremely energetic form of radiation, gamma rays cannot penetrate the atmosphere. Only via orbiting satellites do we know of the presence of these mysterious blasts.

Gamma-ray bursts, or GRBs,  represent the most powerful explosions of energy in the cosmos since the Big Bang itself, corresponding to the equivalent of a thousand Earths vaporized into pure energy in a matter of seconds. One of the most enduring mysteries of the universe since their discovery in the 1960s, only recently have they begun to reveal their secrets.


 Scientists say that a ten-second burst of gamma rays from a massive star explosion within 6,000 light years from Earth could have triggered a mass extinction hundreds of millions of years ago. In this artist’s conception we see the gamma rays hitting the Earth’s atmosphere. (The expanding shell is pictured as blue, but gamma rays are actually invisible.) The gamma rays initiate changes in the atmosphere that deplete ozone and create a brown smog of NO2.

 Image Credit: NASA

With the ozone layer damaged for up to five years, harmful ultraviolet radiation from the Sun would kill smaller life-forms and disrupt the food chain. Scientists say that a gamma-ray burst might have caused the Ordovician extinction 450 million years ago, some 200 million years before dinosaurs.

Gamma-ray bursts in our Milky Way galaxy are indeed rare, but the scientists estimate that at least one nearby likely hit the Earth in the past billion years. Life on Earth is thought to have appeared at least 3.5 billion years ago. This research, supported by a NASA Astrobiology grant, represents a thorough analysis of the “mass extinction” hypothesis first announced by members of this science team in September 2003.

“A gamma-ray burst originating within 6,000 light years from Earth would have a devastating effect on life,” said Dr. Adrian Melott of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Kansas. “We don’t know exactly when one came, but we’re rather sure it did come — and left its mark. What’s most surprising is that just a 10-second burst can cause years of devastating ozone damage.” 

Gamma-ray bursts are the most powerful explosions known in the Universe, and most originate in distant galaxies. A large percentage of bursts likely arise from the explosion of stars over 15 times more massive than our Sun. Scientists say burst from a nearby star could cause severe damage to the Earth’s protective ozone layer. In this artists conception we see the gamma rays hitting the Earth’s atmosphere. (The expanding shell is pictured as blue, but gamma rays are actually invisible.)

Credit: NASA

A scientific paper describing this finding appears in Astrophysical Journal Letters. The lead author is Brian Thomas, a Ph.D. candidate at University of Kansas whom Melott advises. 

Gamma-ray bursts are the most powerful explosions known. Most originate in distant galaxies, and a large percentage likely arise from explosions of stars over 15 times more massive than our Sun. A burst creates two oppositely-directed beams of gamma rays that race off into space. 

Thomas says that a gamma-ray burst may have caused the Ordovician extinction 450 million years ago, killing 60 percent of all marine invertebrates. Life was largely confined to the sea, although there is evidence of primitive land plants during this period. 

In the new work, the team used detailed computer models to calculate the effects of a nearby gamma-ray burst on the atmosphere and the consequences for life. 

Thomas, with Dr. Charles Jackman of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., calculated the effect of a nearby gamma-ray burst on the Earth’s atmosphere. Gamma rays, a high-energy form of light, can break molecular nitrogen (N2) into nitrogen atoms, which react with molecular oxygen (O2) to form nitric oxide (NO). NO will destroy ozone (O3) and produce nitrogen dioxide (NO2). NO2 will then react with atomic oxygen to reform NO. More NO means more ozone destruction. Computer models show that up to half the ozone layer is destroyed within weeks. Five years on, at least 10 percent is still destroyed. 

Next Thomas and fellow student Daniel Hogan, an undergraduate, calculated the effect of ultraviolet radiation on life. Deep-sea creatures living several feet below water would be protected. Surface-dwelling plankton and other life near the surface, however, would not survive. Plankton is the foundation of the marine food chain.

Image/animation This simulation depicts the regions of the planet most susceptible to DNA damage (shown in red) if a large gamma ray burst were to occur close to Earth.

Though there is no direct evidence, scientists say a nearby gamma-ray burst may have caused the great extinction of the late Ordovician period 450 million years ago, which killed 60 percent of all marine invertebrates.

 Credit: NASA/U. of Kansas

Dr. Bruce Lieberman, a paleontologist at the University of Kansas, originated the idea that a gamma-ray burst specifically could have caused the great Ordovician extinction, 200 million years before the dinosaurs. An ice age is thought to have caused this extinction. But a gamma-ray burst could have caused a fast die-out early on and also could have triggered the significant drop in surface temperature on Earth. 

In binary systems containing neutron stars, the emission of gravitational radiation gradually brings the objects closer together. This animation shows such a system after about a billion years, when two equal-mass neutron stars whirl around each other 60,000 times a minute. The stars merge in a few milliseconds, sending out a pulse of gravitational waves and creating a short gamma-ray burst. 

Credit: NASA/Swift/Dana Berry

“One unknown variable is the rate of local gamma-ray bursts,” said Thomas. “The bursts we detect today originated far away billions of years ago, before the Earth formed. Among the billions of stars in our Galaxy, there’s a good chance that a massive one relatively nearby exploded and sent gamma rays our way.” The Swift mission, launched in November 2004, will help determine recent burst rates. Other team members are Dr. Claude Laird of the University of Kansas, and Drs. Richard Stolarski, John Cannizzo, and Neil Gehrels of NASA Goddard. 

The Ordovician–Silurian extinction event, or quite commonly the Ordovician extinction, was the second-largest of the five major extinction events in Earth’s history in terms of percentage of genera that went extinct and second largest overall in the overall loss of life.  Between about 450 Ma to 440 Ma (million years ago), two bursts of extinction, separated by one million years, appear to have happened. This was the second biggest extinction of marine life, ranking only below the Permian extinction. At the time, all known life was confined to the seas and oceans.  
 
More than 60% of marine invertebrates died[including two-thirds of all brachiopod and bryozoan families.  Brachiopods, bivalves, echinoderms, bryozoans and corals were particularly affected. The immediate cause of extinction appears to have been the movement of Gondwana into the south polar region. This led to global cooling, glaciation and consequent sea level fall. The falling sea level disrupted or eliminated habitats along the continental shelves.  Evidence for the glaciation was found through deposits in the Sahara Desert. A combination of lowering of sea level and glacially-driven cooling are likely driving agents for the Ordovician mass extinction
 
A small minority of scientists have suggested that the initial extinctions could have been caused by a gamma ray burst originating from a hypernova within 6,000 light years of Earth (in a nearby arm of the Milky Way Galaxy). A ten-second burst would have stripped the Earth’s atmosphere of half of its ozone almost immediately, exposing surface-dwelling organisms, including those responsible for planetary photosynthesis, to high levels of ultraviolet radiation. Although the hypothesis is consistent with patterns at the onset of extinction, there is no unambiguous evidence that such a nearby gamma ray burst ever happened.

Swift is a first-of-its-kind multi-wavelength observatory dedicated to the study of gamma ray burst (GRB) science. Its three instruments will work together to observe GRBs and afterglows in the gamma ray, X-ray, ultraviolet, and optical wavebands. Swift is designed to solve the 35-year-old mystery of the origin of gamma-ray bursts. Scientists believe GRB are the birth cries of black holes.

Credit: NASA 

See real time map of gamma ray bursts here: Sonoma State University’s real-time GRB sky map tracks GRB, much as the United States Geological Survey (USGS) tracks earthquakes.

Gamma-ray Burst Real-time Sky Map is aweb application that is designed to give up to the minute updates on gamma-ray burst events reported by the various gamma-ray burst detecting satellites.http://grb.sonoma.edu/

 
Data from satellites and observatories around the globe show a jet from a powerful stellar explosion witnessed March 19, 2008 was aimed almost directly at Earth. 

  NASA’s Swift satellite detected the explosion – formally named GRB 080319B – at 2:13 a.m. EDT that morning and pinpointed its position in the constellation Bootes. The event, called a gamma-ray burst, became bright enough for human eyes to see. Observations of the event are giving astronomers the most detailed portrait of a burst ever recorded.

At the same moment Swift saw the burst, the Russian KONUS instrument on NASA’s Wind satellite also sensed the gamma rays and provided a wide view of their spectral structure. A robotic wide-field optical camera called “Pi of the Sky” in Chile simultaneously captured the burst’s first visible light. The system is operated by institutions from Poland.

Within the next 15 seconds, the burst brightened enough to be visible in a dark sky to human eyes. It briefly crested at a magnitude of 5.3 on the astronomical brightness scale. Incredibly, the dying star was 7.5 billion light-years away.

Gamma-ray bursts are the universe’s most luminous explosions. Most occur when massive stars run out of nuclear fuel. As a star’s core collapses, it creates a black hole or neutron star that, through processes not fully understood, drive powerful gas jets outward. These jets punch through the collapsing star. As the jets shoot into space, they strike gas previously shed by the star and heat it. That generates bright afterglows.

 
Other stories:  

Contacts and sources:
Christopher Wanjek 
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Related Links:
Swift mission
Gamma-ray Bursts
Gamma-ray Astronomy
Sonoma State University
NASA Cosmic Mystery Solved
INAF  
Penn State  

NASA Scientists Catch a Unique Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB 050509b)
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/watchtheskies/short_burst.html

Scientists Detect New Kind of Cosmic Explosion (GRB 060218)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/swift/bursts/oddball_burst.html“Naked-Eye” Gamma-Ray Burst Was Aimed Squarely At Earth (GRB080319B)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/swift/bursts/naked_eye_telecon.html

New Gamma-Ray Burst Smashes Cosmic Distance Record (GRB 090423)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/swift/bursts/cosmic_record.html



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    • Golden Dragon

      gamma-ray’s are to blame now….imagine if there really were 35 ft tall beings on this planet eons ago? Imagine again the advancements they have perceived and advanced to through all these centuries and in our beginnings we were only thoughts…..their thoughts….all they need to do its think and its done….so maybe time to think what the Will the Father IS to be done on the Earth as IT IS in Heaven… then perhaps the rays will be staved for generations to come…

    • HomeinTrinity

      First they said there was evidence, then it said there was NO direct evidence….seems to be nothing more than theory to explain away the existence of God….again….

    • Se777en

      Fear porn.

    • JasonX

      They always try to find a new cover story when the holes in the old one become to obvious.

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