Spyke
pawb.social

Wikipedia (Near-Earth Supernova) says that a 25 ly away supernova would wipe out half the ozone layer so that's probably the lower bound for what we want

58
kurwareply
lemmy.world

Geez, how many stars do we have that close to us?

20
hperrinreply
lemmy.world

Your answer is a little misleading. I think you meant there are several stars that close to us, but none that can go supernova.

49
sopuli.xyz

I like this one... Because I understood it!!!! Plus it's funny.

22

When I don't understand them, I'll sometimes check out explainxkcd.com .

6
lemmy.world

Pretty sure the curve should turn up on the right side at some point.

15
lemmy.world

Nah, happiness should asymptotically approach 0 happiness as distance increases, due to decreased brightness. Tho, I guess there could be a discontinuity at the crossover point of where we can no longer observe it and the happiness we can extract from understanding that there are those so far away we can never see them?

8

There's something to be said for very early supernovae. I'm sure they'd all be giddy for something beyond 13 billion light-years (or whatever that works out to in red shift).

8

If we somehow discovered a supernova (or anything, really) beyond the observable universe, I believe the astronomers would be very very happy.

4

At some distance, we can no longer see the stars or even the galaxy. A supernova will allow us to see in really distant past, maybe at the first generation with some really good lensing.

Think ereandel but older

4

Astronomer on a planet just a little too close: "This is a cool way to die"

3

You reached the end

xkcd #2878: Supernova | Spyke