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The earth would have to be a supermassive dying star to emit gamma rays.

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14y ago

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What would happen to earth if it got hit by a gamma-ray burst?

Earth gets hit every day by gamma-ray bursts - from far, far away. Depending on how near the gamma-ray burst is, it may cause some serious damage.


What would happen if a gamma ray burst hit the earth?

If a gamma ray burst hit Earth, it could potentially strip away the ozone layer, leading to an increase in harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. This could have catastrophic effects on the environment and life on Earth. However, the likelihood of a gamma ray burst hitting Earth directly is very low.


What would happen is a volcano erupted in Texas?

No volcanoes in Texas.


What would happen if all the worlds volcanoes erupted?

We all die.


What if earth were hit by a gamma ray burst?

The earth would be completely destroyed.


What damage would happen if a cinder cone volcano erupted in a town?

everyone would die!:(


What will happen if a volcano erupted underground?

it would solidify and make new land


What would happen if you shot a black hole straight though the center with a gamma ray burst?

The gamma rays would be absorbed, the black hole's mass would increase.


What would happen if all the suns that can go supernova went supernova at the same time?

There are huge spaces between stars. The biggest threat to Earth would be the gamma radiation emitted, which could sterilize the Earth from as far as 10 light-years away.


What would happen if there was no life on earth would you have nothing and knowone what would happen?

ha ha well nothing would happen because there was no life on earth.


Will a gamma ray burst end the world?

There has been some speculation that a gamma ray burst has affected life on earth at one or more intervals in the past. And it is possible for it to happen in the future. For a gamma ray burst to destroy earth, the source would have to be moderately close, and because one characteristic of the gamma ray burst is that the emitting body directs two separate "rays" out in opposite directions. We'd have to be exactly in the wrong place at the wrong time and end up on an axial alignment with the gamma ray beam. As the beam is of short duration, the earth would shield a portion of life from its direct effects, but the destruction (ionization) of our atmosphere by the high radiation could burn the entire surface of the planet. Even on the "back side" away from the direction the beam originated in. This could happen, but will it happen? It's an event of low probability. Not that anyone will be spared if we "win the lottery" and get tagged.


How long would it take gamma rays from an exploding star to reach earth?

Gamma rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation, and thus they travel at the speed of light. If a star is one light year away, it will reach Earth in one year.