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Fifth Anniversary of a Cosmic Onslaught

The Bad Astronomer writes "Five years ago today (December 27, 2004), a vast wave of high-energy gamma and X-rays washed over the Earth, blinding satellites and partially ionizing the Earth's atmosphere. The culprit was a superflare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20, located 50,000 light years away. The energy released was mind-numbing: in one-fifth of a second, this supercharged magnetic neutron star blasted out as much energy as the Sun does in 250,000 years!"

2 of 162 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Frist Post! by wizardforce · · Score: 5, Informative

    Assuming that we are working with the standard burning library of congress as the measuring unit, we can define the energy release in those terms:
    1 Burning Library of Conress (BLOC)
    4kcal/g
    20TB data
    1MB/novel
    1 novel = 200g
    4,000 metric tons
    16 billion kcal
     
    Solar output ~~ 10^22 kcal/second
    250,000 years = 8*10^12 seconds
     
    energy of event: 8*10^35 kcal
    energy of event/BLOC ~~ 5*10^25 burning libraries of congress
    1 billion BLOC/second for 1.7 billion years

    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
  2. Re:Zero warning by radtea · · Score: 5, Informative

    It doesn't sound like anything is proven, or else it would be "case closed".

    Wikipedia is not authoritative. Neutrinos have been known to have mass for over five years now, and the physics community is now focused on refining the parameters that characterize massive neutrinos.

    Although we know that neutrinos have mass, we don't know what the mass is because our current experiments are only sensitive to the square of the mass difference between different types of neutrino. However, we do know that all types of neutrino have mass, although the most plausible values are less than a millionth of the electron mass, making it tricky to detect by time-of-flight measurements because any detectable neutrino is going to be ultra-relativistic, travelling so close to the speed of light as to be indistinguishable from a massless particle under almost all circumstances, which is why it was so difficult to prove they do have mass.

    --
    Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.