Most people know the theory that an asteroidsmashed into Earth — hitting what is Obscene Wifenow the Yucatán Peninsula — and killed off many of the dinosaursabout 66 million years ago.
But that was not the only mass extinction for the planet — just the most well-known. Scientists believe at least five mass extinctions have occurred in the past 500 million years, and not all of them were caused by menacing spacerocks. Perhaps two of them, one 372 million years ago and another 445 million years ago, were ice ages.
A new study, based on a census of stars in the Milky Way, suggests those periods of severely cold climates may have begun with stars dying light-yearsaway.
"If a massive star were to explode as a supernova close to the Earth, the results would be devastating for life on Earth," said Nick Wright, an astrophysicist at Keele University in the United Kingdom, in a statement. "This research suggests that this may have already happened."
SEE ALSO: Hubble sees mini galaxies surrounding Andromeda are pretty wildPrevious research has yet to determine the cause for either the late Devonian or Ordovician mass extinctions, which occurred 372 and 445 million years ago, respectively. The Ordovician extinction is thought to have killed off about 60 percent of the invertebrate sea creatures at a time when most of Earth's species lived in the ocean; the late Devonian event eliminated 70 percent of all creatures and influenced sweeping changes in the kinds of fish that survived.
Scientists have suspected these ice ages followed damage to the ozone layer. Crucially, the team working on the census says supernovascould have triggered the catastrophic changes in Earth's protective atmosphere. The rate of supernovas near Earth is consistent with the timing of both mass extinctions. The team's findingsappear in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
A supernovais a cataclysmic stellar deaththat leaves behind a black holeor neutron star. It is the biggest, brightest, and most violent type of explosion scientists have observed in the universe.
These cosmic blasts are element factories, NASAsays: They create carbon, for instance, the same chemical on which humans and much of life on Earth are based. They spread calcium and iron, the same stuff found in bones and blood, across interstellar space. This dispersal seeds new generations of stars and planets.
This is what astronomer Carl Sagan meantwhen he said we're made of "star stuff." The same substances composing our bodies were literally forged within the cores of stars, then flung through the cosmos when they died.
It's a great paradox then that supernovas could be both creators and destroyers of life, the authors observed.
"Supernova explosions bring heavy chemical elements into the interstellar medium, which are then used to form new stars and planets," said Alexis Quintana, lead author, in a statement. "But if a planet, including the Earth, is located too close to this kind of event, this can have devastating effects."
A nearby supernova's blast of various forms of radiation could strip away the ozone layer. By "near," the experts mean within 65 light-years or so. Without the ozone, Earth would be exposed to harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sunand acid rain.
Using models that estimate how stars evolve and emit light at different wavelengths, the team analyzed data from large sky surveys, including data from the European Space Agency's recently retired Gaia mission. The census involved nearly 25,000 so-called "OB stars" — very hot, massive stars — within 1,000 parsecs, or roughly 3,260 light-years, of the sun. These stars are so hot, they're at least double the sun's surface temperature.
This census allowed the scientists to calculate the rate of supernovas in the local region of the galaxy and throughout the Milky Way as a whole. According to the team's calculations, about one supernova happens every 400 million years within close enough vicinity to Earth that its radiation could impact the atmosphere.
The nearest stars that could blow within the next million years are thought to be Antares and Betelgeuse. If that gives you chills, don't worry: Both stars are more than 500 light-years away — far enough that their blasts wouldn't likely trigger an ice age.
Mark Zuckerberg to testify in Congress on Cambridge Analytica'The Toy Shop' investigates Sky DancersChina's TiangongAcer's Chromebook Tab 10 is the world's first Chrome OS tabletGrandma discovers Uber Eats and immediately takes it too farMark Zuckerberg to testify in Congress on Cambridge AnalyticaWhat if yoga pants, but with guns?A brilliant artist reimagined characters from 'The Office' as cartoonsThe KFC Waffle Double Down is coming ... but only to CanadaMarch For Our Lives: Huge crowds across the U.S., visible from spaceThread about how much data Facebook and Google have on you will freak you the hell outRobert Downey Jr. reveals starGoogle buys Tenor, GIF platform that's not GIPHY, to help with GboardResearchers discover mummy in coffin thought to be emptyChance the Rapper slams Heineken ad as 'racist'Apple unveils updates to iWork's Pages at Chicago education eventWeird orange snow captivates skiers in eastern EuropeGrandma discovers Uber Eats and immediately takes it too farTMZ is pretty sure Sanaa Lathan is the actress who bit BeyoncéFoxconn, the company that makes the iPhone, has acquired Belkin for $866 million Happy Birthday, Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Sadie Stein Bill Gates was not expecting all the COVID Rudy Giuliani's hair dye streaked down his face in bizarre press conference moment 'Black Mirror' Season 6: 'Joan Is Awful,' explained Questions of Travel by Sadie Stein The Joys of Yiddish Dictionaries by Ezra Glinter Barnaby Conrad: Author, Matador, Bon Vivant, and Thorn in Hemingway’s Side by Lesley M.M. Blume 'It's like a f*cking horror movie:' Healthcare workers vent about COVID Introducing Our Sixtieth Roses Are Books, and Other News by Sadie Stein PayPal's version of GoFundMe is called Generosity Network What We’re Loving: Fictional Memoirs, Unreliable Narrators by The Paris Review 'Asteroid City' review: Wes Anderson's latest is for the fans B is for Bookseller by Sadie Stein W. Eugene Smith’s Forgotten Coast Trump falls for very obvious parody account pretending to be his sister Elizabeth What We’re Loving: Crapalachia, Welty, Animalia by The Paris Review James Bond’s Breakfast, and Other News by Sadie Stein Dating the Iliad, and Other News by Sadie Stein Story Time! by Sadie Stein
2.7262s , 10132.140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Obscene Wife】,Openness Information Network