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Star going supernova, man the telescopes

She's an arse who can't remember her board name. I expect the Admins have some way of hitting her over the back of the head with it.
 
I think even folks like me, who live under rocks, will notice when Betelgeuse goes supernova.

Isn't it likely to be as bright as moonlight?
 
Not to mention, how much gamma radiation would we get off a star going nova that close to us? And would we get any advance warning signs if this was going to be a problem?
 
Well, it's bound to have happened at SOME point in the last four billion years. Life seems to have avoided mass extinction due to cosmic radition in that time. The Crab Nebula went off just under a thousand years ago and was observed by the astronomers of the time (even in daylight!) and THAT one was right next door, at 6500 ly away.

Mark
 
I think even folks like me, who live under rocks, will notice when Betelgeuse goes supernova.

No, you won't. You might notice that it went supernova a few hundred years in the past though.

And I just discovered something interesting: Apparently scientists can't quite agree on how far from us it is.

However, with distance estimates in the last century that have ranged anywhere from 180 to 1,300 light years from Earth, calculating its diameter, luminosity and mass have proven difficult. Betelgeuse is currently thought to lie around 640 light years away...
 
Something doesn't have to be a mass extinction event to still cause problems. I mean, look at what even sunspots do to electronics.
 
Something doesn't have to be a mass extinction event to still cause problems. I mean, look at what even sunspots do to electronics.
Then we need to harden our electronics against sunspots. If Air Force One can be hardened against a direct EMP, then everything else can be too.

I wish I had my super-binoculars over here, but I left them in the UK when I moved.
 
Our infrastructure needs to be hardened against a lot of things, to be honest; it's practically stuck in the 1970s.
 
I think even folks like me, who live under rocks, will notice when Betelgeuse goes supernova.

No, you won't. You might notice that it went supernova a few hundred years in the past though.

I can't believe you're lecturing us on the nature of light and time. From our perspective, Betelgeuse will blow up when the light from that explosion reaches us. That is all.
 
I think even folks like me, who live under rocks, will notice when Betelgeuse goes supernova.

No, you won't. You might notice that it went supernova a few hundred years in the past though.

I can't believe you're lecturing us on the nature of light and time. From our perspective, Betelgeuse will blow up when the light from that explosion reaches us. That is all.

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJp86_tj9KQ[/yt]
 
[/QUOTE]
But will it destroy the galaxy?[/QUOTE]

Red Matter! Where the hell did I put that Red Matter! I'll bet that damn cat has it under the sofa! :)
 
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