TheScienceKid
TheScienceKid
110 / 16
16th Mar 2017
27th Dec 2017
The Most energetic event in the universe, created when a giant star goes hypernova, or when two blackholes merge. one reason its so powerful is, instead of spherical expansion, its extremly focused, like a beam of pure energy!
dramatic earth gammaray woodtoinst unstopable prot

Comments

  • TheScienceKid
    TheScienceKid
    18th Mar 2017
    edit, made the destruction more realistic
  • Phade
    Phade
    18th Mar 2017
    Yah, thats a cool hypernova
  • Xilli
    Xilli
    18th Mar 2017
    +1... WATCH IN VELOCITY DISPLAY! HOOOOOOOOOLLYYYY SHIIIIIIIIIIII- It's so damn trippy in vel. display.
  • LackToastandTolerant
    LackToastandTolerant
    18th Mar 2017
    10/10 would laz again!
  • motaywo
    motaywo
    17th Mar 2017
    I just realized, I like reading Wikipedia waayyy too much. Sorry for that. +1 btw
  • motaywo
    motaywo
    17th Mar 2017
    Because they are often so far away, if one is aimed right at Earth, our atmosphere would get fried, and all life on the planet would be irradiated. Earth would still be there, but we wouldn't...
  • motaywo
    motaywo
    17th Mar 2017
    It's a bit overly dramatic, but still looks good. An actual GRB only produces about 1/2000th of the energy-mass equivalent of the sun (the energy that would be created if every atom in the sun was converted entirely to energy). The beam travels at about 99.995% the speed of light, and a fully spherical explosion of the same magnitude would release more energy than our sun will in its entire life.
  • SFStudios
    SFStudios
    17th Mar 2017
    It's very laggy for me and probably kind of unrealistic but it's still cool +1
  • TheScienceKid
    TheScienceKid
    17th Mar 2017
    wait nvm, itsd because the prot in the neut is creating gases that the neut bounces off
  • TheScienceKid
    TheScienceKid
    17th Mar 2017
    i have no clue how i got that neutron to emit neutrons, can someone clue me in?