Astrobiological Effects of Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Milky Way Galaxy
Michael G. Gowanlock

TL;DR
This study models the potential destructive effects of gamma-ray bursts on planetary biospheres in the Milky Way, considering different galaxy evolution scenarios and their implications for life survival over cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a comparative analysis of GRB occurrence based on star formation history and metallicity, providing new insights into the spatial and temporal risks to life in the galaxy.
Findings
Majority of stars near the solar radius survive GRBs in the past 1 Gyr.
Low current danger of long GRBs to life at the solar radius.
High redshift epochs likely had a lower impact on planetary survival due to GRB rates.
Abstract
A planet having protective ozone within the collimated beam of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) may suffer ozone depletion, potentially causing a mass extinction event to existing life on a planet's surface and oceans. We model the dangers of long GRBs to planets in the Milky Way and utilize a static statistical model of the Galaxy that matches major observable properties, such as the inside-out star formation history, metallicity evolution, and 3-dimensional stellar number density distribution. The GRB formation rate is a function of both the star formation history and metallicity; however, the extent to which chemical evolution reduces the GRB rate over time in the Milky Way is still an open question. Therefore, we compare the damaging effects of GRBs to biospheres in the Milky Way using two models. One model generates GRBs as a function of the inside-out star formation history. The other…
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