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Gamma Ray Bursts May Have Caused Ancient Extinctions

Scientists at NASA 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.

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.

These scientists calculated the potential 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.

This visualization shows 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.

[This text is from the NASA web story on the subject. See the Story URL below.]


Regions of Earth susceptible to DNA damage are shown in red.    Regions of Earth susceptible to DNA damage are shown in red.
Duration: 27.0 seconds
Available formats:
  320x240 (30 fps) MPEG-1   3 MB
  640x480 (30 fps) MPEG-1   11 MB
  720x480 (29.97 fps) MPEG-2   23 MB
  320x240     JPEG         5 KB
  720x486 (30 fps) Frames (Visualization)
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  720x486 (30 fps) Frames (Composite)
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Regions susceptible to DNA damage before a Gamma Ray Burst    Regions susceptible to DNA damage before a Gamma Ray Burst

Available formats:
  2560 x 1920     TIFF 2 MB
  160 x 80           PNG 25 KB
  320 x 240         JPEG 4 KB
  80 x 40             PNG   7 KB


 Regions susceptible to DNA damage just after a Gamma Ray Burst    Regions susceptible to DNA damage just after a Gamma Ray Burst

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  320 x 240         JPEG 4 KB


 Regions susceptible to DNA damage about 9 months after a Gamma Ray Burst    Regions susceptible to DNA damage about 9 months after a Gamma Ray Burst

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  320 x 240         JPEG 4 KB


Color bar showing blue (0) to dark red (16.5) DNA Damage index    Color bar showing blue (0) to dark red (16.5) DNA Damage index

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  651 x 272         JPEG 10 KB
  318 x 133         JPEG 4 KB


Color bar showing blue (0) to dark red (16.5) with alpha (transparent colorbar from 0 to 1)    Color bar showing blue (0) to dark red (16.5) with alpha (transparent colorbar from 0 to 1)

Available formats:
  651 x 272         TIFF 136 KB
  651 x 272         JPEG 13 KB
  318 x 133         JPEG 4 KB

Animation Number:3149
Animator:Greg Shirah (Lead)
Studio:SVS
Completed:2005-03-30
Scientists:Brian Thomas (Univerisy of Kansas)
 Daniel Hogan (University of Kansas)
 Adrian Melott (Univerisy of Kansas)
 Charles Jackman (NASA/GSFC)
Instrument:Airborne Topographic Mapper
Data set:Model of DNA damage regions
Data Collected:91 days before burst to 718 days after burst
Keywords:
SVS >> Gamma Ray
SVS >> DNA
SVS >> Gamma Ray Burst
More Information on this topic available at:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/starsgalaxies/gammaray_extinction.html
 
 
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NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Scientific Visualization Studio


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