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Tree rings may hold clues to earthly impacts of distant supernovas

Massive explosions of energy happening thousands of light-years from Earth may have left traces in our planet鈥檚 biology and geology, according to new research by 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 geoscientist Robert Brakenridge.听

The study, , probes the impacts of supernovas, some of the most violent events in the known universe. In the span of just a few months, a single one of these eruptions can release as much energy as the sun will during its entire lifetime. They鈥檙e also bright鈥攔eally bright.

鈥淲e see supernovas in other galaxies all the time,鈥 said Brakenridge, a senior research associate at the (INSTAAR) at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载. 鈥淭hrough a telescope, a galaxy is a little misty spot. Then, all of a sudden, a star appears and may be as bright as the rest of the galaxy.鈥

A very nearby supernova could be capable of wiping human civilization off the face of the Earth. But even from farther away, these explosions may still take a toll, Brakenridge said, bathing our planet in dangerous radiation and damaging its protective ozone layer.

To study those possible impacts, Brakenridge searched through the planet鈥檚 tree ring records for the fingerprints of these distant, cosmic explosions. His findings suggest that relatively close supernovas could theoretically have triggered at least four disruptions to Earth鈥檚 climate over the last 40,000 years.听

Bubble of expanding gas created by a supernova.

A bubble of gas expanding at roughly 11 million miles per hour created by the shockwave from a supernova. (Credit: NASA)

The results are far from conclusive, but they offer tantalizing hints that, when it comes to the stability of life on Earth, what happens in space doesn鈥檛 always stay in space.

鈥淭hese are extreme events, and their potential effects seem to match tree ring records,鈥 Brakenridge said.听

Radiocarbon spikes

His research hinges on the case of a curious atom. Brakenridge explained that carbon-14, also known as radiocarbon, is a carbon isotope that occurs only in tiny amounts on Earth. It鈥檚 not from around here, either. Radiocarbon is formed when cosmic rays from space bombard our planet鈥檚 atmosphere on an almost constant basis.听

鈥淭here鈥檚 generally a steady amount year after year,鈥 Brakenridge said. 鈥淭rees pick up carbon dioxide and some of that carbon will be radiocarbon.鈥

Sometimes, however, the amount of radiocarbon that trees pick up isn鈥檛 steady. Scientists have discovered a handful of cases in which the concentration of this isotope inside tree rings spikes鈥攕uddenly and for no apparent earthly reason. Many scientists have hypothesized that these several-year-long spikes could be due to solar flares or huge ejections of energy from the surface of the sun.听

Brakenridge and a handful of other researchers have had their eye on events much farther from home.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing terrestrial events that are begging for an explanation,鈥 Brakenridge said. 鈥淭here are really only two possibilities: A solar flare or a supernova. I think the supernova hypothesis has been dismissed too quickly.鈥

Beware Betelgeuse

He noted that scientists have recorded supernovas in other galaxies that have produced a stupendous amount of gamma radiation鈥攖he same kind of radiation that can trigger the formation of radiocarbon atoms on Earth. While these isotopes aren鈥檛 dangerous on their own, a spike in their levels could indicate that energy from a distant supernova has traveled hundreds to thousands of light-years to our planet.听

To test the hypothesis, Brakenridge turned to the past. He听assembled a list of supernovas that occurred relatively close to Earth over the last 40,000 years. Scientists can study these events by observing the nebulas they left behind. He then compared the estimated ages of those galactic fireworks to the tree ring record on the ground.听

He found that of the eight closest supernovas studied, all seemed to be associated with unexplained spikes in the radiocarbon record on Earth. He considers four of these to be especially promising candidates. Take the case of a former star in the Vela constellation. This celestial body, which once sat about 815 light-years from Earth, went supernova roughly 13,000 years ago. Not long after that, radiocarbon levels jumped up by nearly 3% on Earth鈥攁 staggering increase.

The findings aren鈥檛 anywhere close to a smoking gun, or star, in this case. Scientists still have trouble dating past supernovas, making the timing of the Vela explosion uncertain with a possible error of as much as 1,500 years. It鈥檚 also not clear what the impacts of such a disruption might have been for plants and animals on Earth at the time. But Brakenridge believes that the question is worth a lot more research.

鈥淲hat keeps me going is when I look at the terrestrial record and I say, 鈥楳y God, the predicted and modeled effects do appear to be there.鈥欌澨

He hopes that humanity won鈥檛 have to see those effects for itself anytime soon. Some astronomers think they鈥檝e picked up signs that Betelgeuse, a red giant star in the constellation Orion, might be on the verge of collapsing and going supernova. And it鈥檚 only 642.5 light-years from Earth, much closer than Vela.听

鈥淲e can hope that鈥檚 not what鈥檚 about to happen because Betelgeuse is really close,鈥 he said said.