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"Hidden person" from space

Người Lao ĐộngNgười Lao Động16/02/2025

(NLDO) - A mysterious radioactive explosion has been detected deep beneath the Central and North Pacific Ocean.


Analyzing several thin layers of crust on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean , scientists in Germany identified a sudden increase in the radioactive isotope beryllium-10 sometime between 9 and 12 million years ago.

Remarkably, beryllium-10 can only be formed with intervention from cosmic elements.

Dị thường phóng xạ Thái Bình Dương:

Map marking areas with sudden increases in radioactive isotope beryllium-10 in the Pacific Ocean - Photo: GEBCO

The beryllium-10 was detected on the seafloor of the Central and North Pacific, but the team led by physicist Dominik Koll from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (Germany) believes that other parts of the Pacific Ocean are also present.

It's not known where this sudden increase comes from, but researchers have come up with a few ideas.

Beryllium-10 is associated with cosmic impacts, but it is not so unusual.

Their most common source on Earth comes from cosmic rays interacting with Earth's atmosphere.

As rain falls from the atmosphere and settles into the ocean, this isotope is incorporated into the extremely slow evolution of some deep metal-rich crusts.

Still, the unusual amount of beryllium-10 in the Pacific — nearly double the normal level — suggests something must be causing the additional impact.

Dr. Koll and colleagues suggest that there may have been a major "reorganization" of ocean currents more than 9 million years ago, causing these isotopes to be accidentally dumped into the Pacific Ocean.

Or it could be a global phenomenon, involving the cataclysmic explosion of a star near Earth, called a supernova.

Dị thường phóng xạ Thái Bình Dương:

A supernova - Illustration: BBC SKY AND NIGHT MAGAZINE

Supernovae occur at the end of the lives of stars, ejecting material from the star far away. Cosmic dust from the explosion may have entered the solar system and coated Earth with radioactive isotopes.

Additionally, the supernova explosion could also cause cosmic rays to become more active for a time, causing a spike in beryllium-10 produced in the atmosphere.

The study was recently published in the scientific journal Nature Communications.



Source: https://nld.com.vn/di-thuong-phong-xa-thai-binh-duong-ke-giau-mat-tu-vu-tru-196250216081340872.htm

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