Ever heard of SGR 1806-20?

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The flash of radiation on 27 December was so powerful that it bounced off the Moon and lit up the Earth's atmosphere.

The blast occurred on the surface of an exotic kind of star - a super-magnetic neutron star called SGR 1806-20.

If the explosion had been within just 10 light-years, Earth could have suffered a mass extinction.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4278005.stm

I don't know about you, but I found this news story (from the BBC News website yesterday) quite disturbing :nervous: :nervous: .... we wouldn't have known much about it probably....
 
And the untold note is that SGR 1806-20 is 50,000 light years away. It's kinda like saying

"if he dropped that hand grenade closer, I could've been killed."

"Where'd he drop it?"

"Baghdad"


So yes, we could have been wiped off the face of the earth. Then again, I risk my life every time I drive to work because noone knows if that Tractor Trailer is going to miss that corner, or not check his mirror.

If you're going to be nervous and scared of death, pick something finite and realistic to be scared of.

Granted, yes it would make me nervous to think that something like this occured, but I'm guessing it happens quite often, we just don't know about it.

AO
 
wildcard
Wow! 10 light years is quite a ways away, though. It's not like it was even close to Planet Earth.

Do you know how many stars are within 10ly of Earth?

Including the Sun (main sequence, yellow dwarf), there's 8. They are Proxima Centauri (red giant, 4.2ly), Alpha Centauri A (main sequence, yellow dwarf, 4.2ly), Alpha Centauri B (orange, K1 type, 4.2ly), Barnard's Star (red giant, 5.9ly), Lalande 21185 (red giant, 8.3ly), Sirius (white, 8.6ly) and Ross 154 (red giant, 9.7ly). None of them are even remotely capable of delivering this kind of shock.
 
Famine
…there's 8.
There are. ;)

Saw this on /. today. Yes, 10 vs. 50,000 is a big difference.

BTW, does that mean this explosion happened 50,000 years ago?
 
...there is (a group of) 8.

The collective is implied in the sentence and becomes unnecessary - and can be omitted. So nyah!

And yes - the explosion happened 50,000 years ago... Scary, huh?
 
Der Alta
If you're going to be nervous and scared of death, pick something finite and realistic to be scared of.

Sound advice, but don't worry, I'm not going to lose much sleep... as Famine suggests, the chances of something like this happening within a 10 l.y. radius from Earth are vanishingly small... I still think it's freaky that something that happened so long ago could (potentially) affect every person on the Planet today... ;)
 
One calculation has the giant flare on SGR 1806-20 unleashing about 10,000 trillion trillion trillion watts.

"This is a once-in-a-lifetime event. We have observed an object only 20km across, on the other side of our galaxy, releasing more energy in a 10th of a second than the Sun emits in 100,000 years," said Dr Fender.
:eek: It's fascinating reading about how much power this explosion had. And to think it occured 50,000 years ago too!
 
what they DON'T know is that SGR 1806-20 is actually the deathstar that blew up a long time ago, in a galaxy far, fary away.
 
I think this is a bit more detailed. :)

Space.com
A huge explosion halfway across the galaxy packed so much power it briefly altered Earth's upper atmosphere in December, astronomers said Friday.

No known eruption beyond our solar system has ever appeared as bright upon arrival.

But you could not have seen it, unless you can top the X-ray vision of Superman: In gamma rays, the event equaled the brightness of the full Moon's reflected visible light.

The blast originated about 50,000 light-years away and was detected Dec. 27. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, about 6 trillion miles (10 trillion kilometers).

The commotion was caused by a special variety of neutron star known as a magnetar. These fast-spinning, compact stellar corpses -- no larger than a big city -- create intense magnetic fields that trigger explosions. The blast was 100 times more powerful than any other similar eruption witnessed, said David Palmer of Los Alamos National Laboratory, one of several researchers around the world who monitored the event with various telescopes.

Tsunami Connection?
Several readers wondered if the magnetar blast could be related to the December tsunami. Scientists have made no such connection. The blast affected Earth's ionosphere, which is routinely affected to a greater extent by changes in solar activity.
"Had this happened within 10 light-years of us, it would have severely damaged our atmosphere and possibly have triggered a mass extinction," said Bryan Gaensler of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA).

There are no magnetars close enough to worry about, however, Gaensler and two other astronomers told SPACE.com. But the strength of the tempest has them marveling over the dying star's capabilities while also wondering if major species die-offs in the past might have been triggered by stellar explosions.

'Once-in-a-lifetime'

The Sun is a middle-aged star about 8 light-minutes from us. It's tantrums, though cosmically pitiful compared to the magnetar explosion, routinely squish Earth's protective magnetic field and alter our atmosphere, lighting up the night sky with colorful lights called aurora.

Solar storms also alter the shape of Earth's ionosphere, a region of the atmosphere 50 miles (80 kilometers) up where gas is so thin that electrons can be stripped from atoms and molecules -- they are ionized -- and roam free for short periods. Fluctuations in solar radiation cause the ionosphere to expand and contract.

"The gamma rays hit the ionosphere and created more ionization, briefly expanding the ionosphere," said Neil Gehrels, lead scientist for NASA's gamma-ray watching Swift observatory.

Gehrels said in an email interview that the effect was similar to a solar-induced disruption but that the effect was "much smaller than a big solar flare."

Still, scientists were surprised that a magnetar so far away could alter the ionosphere.

"That it can reach out and tap us on the shoulder like this, reminds us that we really are linked to the cosmos," said Phil Wilkinson of IPS Australia, that country's space weather service.

"This is a once-in-a-lifetime event," said Rob Fender of Southampton University in the UK. "We have observed an object only 20 kilometers across [12 miles], on the other side of our galaxy, releasing more energy in a tenth of a second than the Sun emits in 100,000 years."

Some researchers have speculated that one or more known mass extinctions hundreds of millions of years ago might have been the result of a similar blast altering Earth's atmosphere. There is no firm data to support the idea, however. But astronomers say the Sun might have been closer to other stars in the past.

A similar blast within 10 light-years of Earth "would destroy the ozone layer," according to a CfA statement, "causing abrupt climate change and mass extinctions due to increased radiation."

The all-clear has been sounded, however.

"None of the known sample [of magnetars] are closer than about 4,000-5,000 light years from us," Gaensler said. "This is a very safe distance."

Cause a mystery

Researchers don't know exactly why the burst was so incredible. The star, named SGR 1806-20, spins once on its axis every 7.5 seconds, and it is surrounded by a magnetic field more powerful than any other object in the universe.

"We may be seeing a massive release of magnetic energy during a 'starquake' on the surface of the object," said Maura McLaughlin of the University of Manchester in the UK.

Another possibility is that the magnetic field more or less snapped in a process scientists call magnetic reconnection.

Gamma rays are the highest form of radiation on the electromagnetic spectrum, which includes X-rays, visible light and radio waves too.

The eruption was also recorded by the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array of radio telescopes, along with other European satellites and telescopes in Australia.

Explosive details

A neutron star is the remnant of a star that was once several times more massive than the Sun. When their nuclear fuel is depleted, they explode as a supernova. The remaining dense core is slightly more massive than the Sun but has a diameter typically no more than 12 miles (20 kilometers).

Millions of neutron stars fill the Milky Way galaxy. A dozen or so are ultra-magnetic neutron stars -- magnetars. The magnetic field around one is about 1,000 trillion gauss, strong enough to strip information from a credit card at a distance halfway to the Moon, scientists say.

Of the known magnetars, four are called soft gamma repeaters, or SGRs, because they flare up randomly and release gamma rays. The flare on SGR 1806-20 unleashed about 10,000 trillion trillion trillion watts of power.

"The next biggest flare ever seen from any soft gamma repeater was peanuts compared to this incredible Dec. 27 event," said Gaensler of the CfA.

 
Quick question to Famine; do we know what would happen if one of those stars were to supernova on us (are we in range of the blast)?
 
Der Alta
And the untold note is that SGR 1806-20 is 50,000 light years away. It's kinda like saying

"if he dropped that hand grenade closer, I could've been killed."

"Where'd he drop it?"

"Baghdad"

AO

👍:lol::lol::lol:
That was just great.
I dont really know how to react to the topic though. Ok, a star quake. *weeee*. <-- that ok?
 
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