2003
DOI: 10.1086/346127
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Ozone Depletion from Nearby Supernovae

Abstract: Estimates made in the 1970's indicated that a supernova occurring within tens of parsecs of Earth could have significant effects on the ozone layer. Since that time, improved tools for detailed modeling of atmospheric chemistry have been developed to calculate ozone depletion, and advances have been made in theoretical modeling of supernovae and of the resultant gamma-ray spectra. In addition, one now has better knowledge of the occurrence rate of supernovae in the galaxy, and of the spatial distribution of pr… Show more

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Cited by 175 publications
(332 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(54 reference statements)
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“…A significant fraction of damaging cosmic rays are absorbed or scattered away from the Earth by the Sun's heliosheath, and the Earth's own protective magnetic field. Simply stating that a SN is "deadly within 8pc" is an extremely glib statement, and belies the subtleties involved in determining the effect of hazardous interstellar radiation on planets within stellar magnetospheres (Gehrels et al, 2003;Martin et al, 2009;Thomas, Neale & Snyder, 2015). Future GHZ modelling must address these concerns, first put forward by Prantzos (2007), and which remain unresolved.…”
Section: Limitations Of Our Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A significant fraction of damaging cosmic rays are absorbed or scattered away from the Earth by the Sun's heliosheath, and the Earth's own protective magnetic field. Simply stating that a SN is "deadly within 8pc" is an extremely glib statement, and belies the subtleties involved in determining the effect of hazardous interstellar radiation on planets within stellar magnetospheres (Gehrels et al, 2003;Martin et al, 2009;Thomas, Neale & Snyder, 2015). Future GHZ modelling must address these concerns, first put forward by Prantzos (2007), and which remain unresolved.…”
Section: Limitations Of Our Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mean free path of such photons in the atmosphere is quite short and most of the energy is dumped in the stratosphere where ozone concentrations are highest (Gehreis et al 2003). Moreover, the effects are quite different: each photon is able to produce many ionizations or dissociations of molecules, about one ionization per 35 eV, as used in Gehreis et al (2003). Smith et al (2003) have computed the propagation of such photons in Earth-like planetary atmospheres.…”
Section: Atmospheric and Biological Effects Of Grbsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If M12 was caused by a supernova, a candidate supernova should exist, but observations spanning several hundred years before AD 775 record no such event. Supernovae emit both high-energy particles and gamma rays, but high-energy particles from supernova have sufficient energy spread that extended arrival times spanning at least 10 yr would be expected (Gehrels 2003;Dee et al 2017) *Corresponding author. Email: jsouthon@uci.edu.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%