Abstract It is known that a gamma ray burst (GRB) originating near the Earth could be devastating to life. The mechanism of ozone depletion and subsequent increased UVB exposure is the primary risk, but models also show increased nitrification culminating in nitric acid rainout. These effects are also expected after nearby supernovae and extreme solar proton events. In this work we considered specifically whether the increased nitric acid rainout from such events is a threat to modern terrestrial ecosystems. We also considered its potential benefit to early terrestrial Paleozoic ecosystems. We used established critical loads for nitrogen deposition in ecoregions of Europe and the US and compared them with previously predicted values of nitric acid rainout from a typical GRB within our galaxy. The predicted rainout was found to be too low to harm modern ecosystems, however, it is large compared with probable nitrate flux onto land prior to the invasion of plants. We suggest that this flux may have contributed nutrients to this invasion if, as hypothesized, the end-Ordovician extinction event were initiated by a GRB or other ionizing radiation event.


    Access

    Check access

    Check availability in my library

    Order at Subito €


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    Nitrate deposition following an astrophysical ionizing radiation event


    Contributors:

    Published in:

    Advances in Space Research ; 55 , 12 ; 2946-2949


    Publication date :

    2015-03-12


    Size :

    4 pages




    Type of media :

    Article (Journal)


    Type of material :

    Electronic Resource


    Language :

    English





    Ionizing radiation

    Roth, E. M. | NTRS | 1968


    Ionizing radiation

    Tobias, C. A. / Grigoryev, Y. G. | NTRS | 1975


    Chapter 17. Ionizing Radiation

    Huntoon, Carolyn S. Leach / Antipov, Vsevolod V. / Grigoriev, Anatoliy I. | AIAA | 1996


    Ionizing radiation exposure of LDEF

    Benton, E. V. / Heinrich, W. | NTRS | 1990