PSJC #186 March 20 2015
Patricio Cubillos
Possible Role of GRBs on Life Extinction in the Universe
We will discuss a paper by
Piran
and Jimenez (2014)
that was published late last year in
Phys. Rev. Lett.. The abstract is as follows:
As a copious source of gamma rays, a nearby galactic gamma ray burst
(GRB) can be a threat to life. Using recent determinations of the rate of
GRBs, their luminosity function, and properties of their host galaxies,
we estimate the probability that a life-threatening (lethal) GRB would
take place. Amongst the different kinds of GRBs, long ones are most
dangerous. There is a very good chance (but no certainty) that at least
one lethal GRB took place during the past 5 gigayears close enough to
Earth as to significantly damage life. There is a 50% chance that such
a lethal GRB took place during the last 500×106 years,
causing one
of the major mass extinction events. Assuming that a similar level of
radiation would be lethal to life on other exoplanets hosting life, we
explore the potential effects of GRBs to life elsewhere in the Galaxy
and the Universe. We find that the probability of a lethal GRB is much
larger in the inner Milky Way (95% within a radius of 4 kpc from the
galactic center), making it inhospitable to life. Only at the outskirts
of the Milky Way, at more than 10 kpc from the galactic center, does this
probability drop below 50%. When considering the Universe as a whole,
the safest environments for life (similar to the one on Earth) are the
lowest density regions in the outskirts of large galaxies, and life can
exist in only ≈10% of galaxies. Remarkably, a cosmological constant
is essential for such systems to exist. Furthermore, because of both the
higher GRB rate and galaxies being smaller, life as it exists on Earth
could not take place at z>0.5. Early life forms must have been much
more resilient to radiation.