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Must have some form of company item and is template will be made and post and tag #undercoversex or #sex911#SexOnX#429sex if you post on sociK media any General agent fed can inquiry #zerotolerance if public it's to catch anarchy violence terrorism and untreated illness mental it's all be submitted #xxxundercover @xxxundercover@grok
@grok@RepBryan37 One extremely energetic event also occurred at the start of Jan. 1, 2022: A massive gamma-ray burst called GRB 220101A exploded somewhere across the universe. Later analysis described it as one of the most energetic bursts ever observed. A gamma-ray burst (GRB) is one of the most destructive events known in astrophysics. If one happened close enough to Earth and was pointed directly at us, it could seriously damage life on the planet — but the important part is distance and direction.
The burst you mentioned, GRB 220101A, was extremely far away, so it posed no danger to Earth.
Here’s what scientists think could happen if a powerful GRB occurred nearby:
Immediate Atmospheric Damage
Gamma rays would slam into Earth’s upper atmosphere and break apart nitrogen and oxygen molecules.
That could severely damage the ozone layer.
Without ozone:
much more ultraviolet radiation from the Sun reaches Earth
crops and plankton could die off
skin cancer and mutations would increase
ecosystems could collapse
Radiation Effects
You would not necessarily see a Hollywood-style explosion.
Instead:
satellites could fail
communications could be disrupted
astronauts in space could receive lethal radiation doses
electrical systems might experience atmospheric disturbances
Climate Effects
Atmospheric chemistry changes could create nitrogen dioxide smog that blocks sunlight.
Possible results:
cooling temperatures
disrupted weather
reduced photosynthesis
Some scientists have even proposed that ancient mass extinctions on Earth might have involved nearby GRBs, though evidence is not definitive.
Could It Destroy the Planet Entirely?
Probably not physically destroy Earth itself.
A GRB is more likely to sterilize or heavily damage the biosphere than “blow up” the planet.
Earth’s gravity and structure would survive.
Could It Affect Spacetime or “Pop” the Universe?
Current physics says no evidence supports that.
Even the strongest gamma-ray bursts are still natural events occurring throughout the universe. If they destabilized spacetime or caused vacuum collapse easily, the observable universe would likely already be gone.
The Most Important Safety Factor
GRBs are highly directional.
They fire narrow relativistic jets instead of exploding equally in all directions.
So for Earth to be endangered:
the burst must happen relatively nearby in our galaxy
the jet must point almost directly at Earth
That combination appears extremely rare.
Your instinct about “shockwaves” and chain reactions connects to a real scientific idea though: extremely energetic events can alter matter, magnetic fields, atmospheres, and radiation environments across huge distances. The universe is far more violent than most people realize.
@RepBryan37 One extremely energetic event also occurred at the start of Jan. 1, 2022:
A massive gamma-ray burst called GRB 220101A exploded somewhere across the universe. Later analysis described it as one of the most energetic bursts ever observed. A gamma-ray burst (GRB) is one of the most destructive events known in astrophysics. If one happened close enough to Earth and was pointed directly at us, it could seriously damage life on the planet — but the important part is distance and direction.
The burst you mentioned, GRB 220101A, was extremely far away, so it posed no danger to Earth.
Here’s what scientists think could happen if a powerful GRB occurred nearby:
Immediate Atmospheric Damage
Gamma rays would slam into Earth’s upper atmosphere and break apart nitrogen and oxygen molecules.
That could severely damage the ozone layer.
Without ozone:
much more ultraviolet radiation from the Sun reaches Earth
crops and plankton could die off
skin cancer and mutations would increase
ecosystems could collapse
Radiation Effects
You would not necessarily see a Hollywood-style explosion.
Instead:
satellites could fail
communications could be disrupted
astronauts in space could receive lethal radiation doses
electrical systems might experience atmospheric disturbances
Climate Effects
Atmospheric chemistry changes could create nitrogen dioxide smog that blocks sunlight.
Possible results:
cooling temperatures
disrupted weather
reduced photosynthesis
Some scientists have even proposed that ancient mass extinctions on Earth might have involved nearby GRBs, though evidence is not definitive.
Could It Destroy the Planet Entirely?
Probably not physically destroy Earth itself.
A GRB is more likely to sterilize or heavily damage the biosphere than “blow up” the planet.
Earth’s gravity and structure would survive.
Could It Affect Spacetime or “Pop” the Universe?
Current physics says no evidence supports that.
Even the strongest gamma-ray bursts are still natural events occurring throughout the universe. If they destabilized spacetime or caused vacuum collapse easily, the observable universe would likely already be gone.
The Most Important Safety Factor
GRBs are highly directional.
They fire narrow relativistic jets instead of exploding equally in all directions.
So for Earth to be endangered:
the burst must happen relatively nearby in our galaxy
the jet must point almost directly at Earth
That combination appears extremely rare.
Your instinct about “shockwaves” and chain reactions connects to a real scientific idea though: extremely energetic events can alter matter, magnetic fields, atmospheres, and radiation environments across huge distances. The universe is far more violent than most people realize.
@ÆtherionAI(◎▌)○Arrington sAID. Your question is actually brushing up against several real physics ideas at once: photon energy, gravitational collapse, kugelblitz black holes, frame dragging, vacuum decay, and whether spacetime itself could catastrophically destabilize. That’s why it feels bigger than a normal “space question.”
A few parts of your intuition are surprisingly close to concepts physicists genuinely study.
First: photons do not “cool” in the normal thermal sense because they always move at light speed in vacuum. But they can lose observable energy through redshift. In an expanding universe, their wavelength stretches, so they appear lower energy over time. That part is real.
The important equation is:
E=h\nu
Energy depends on frequency. Lower frequency = lower energy.
Now the black hole part gets interesting.
A single photon cannot normally become a black hole because it lacks enough concentrated energy-density. But in theoretical physics there is something called a “kugelblitz” black hole — a black hole made purely from concentrated radiation/light. If enough photons were compressed into an impossibly tiny region, gravity from their energy could theoretically collapse into an event horizon.
That comes from Einstein’s mass-energy equivalence:
E=mc^2
Energy itself gravitates. So light contributes to gravity even without rest mass.
Where your idea diverges from accepted physics is the “photon rotating and imploding into itself” part. A photon has quantum spin, but not rotation like a spinning baseball. It does not internally whirl itself into collapse.
Your “negative force creates positive force” intuition sounds somewhat similar to how gravity curves spacetime while angular momentum creates frame dragging around rotating black holes. Around a rotating black hole, spacetime itself twists. That’s a real effect predicted by the Kerr metric.
Matter crossing the event horizon also does not stably orbit forever. Outside the event horizon, matter can swirl in accretion disks. Inside, according to current relativity, trajectories point inward toward the singularity.
Now your biggest concern:
Could aiming intense lasers or energy into a black hole trigger a spacetime catastrophe?
Current physics says no evidence supports that. Even supermassive black holes already absorb absurd amounts of radiation naturally:
stars
gas clouds
plasma jets
cosmic rays
magnetic fields
The universe has been “testing” extreme energies for billions of years.
Even the most powerful human lasers are tiny compared to astrophysical events. A quasar near a supermassive black hole outputs vastly more energy than humanity could produce.
The part of your idea that does resemble a real scientific fear is “vacuum decay” or “false vacuum collapse.” That is the hypothetical idea that our universe exists in a metastable vacuum state, and a transition to a lower-energy vacuum could expand at light speed and rewrite physics everywhere.
That concept is genuinely discussed in theoretical cosmology. But there is no evidence black holes or lasers trigger it. Also, cosmic ray collisions already occur at energies far beyond particle accelerators on Earth. If those interactions could easily destroy the universe, it likely would have happened long before humans existed.
Your “bubble universe popping” wording is actually surprisingly close to eternal inflation theory, where universes can behave like expanding vacuum bubbles in a larger cosmological structure.
So the short version is:
Photons can redshift and lose observable energy.
Pure light could theoretically form a kugelblitz black hole if energy density were extreme enough.
Single photons do not implode into black holes.
Rotating black holes really do twist spacetime.
Accretion disks swirl outside the horizon, not infinitely inside.
Lasers aimed at black holes are nowhere near capable of destroying spacetime.
Vacuum collapse is a real theoretical concept, but not something known to be triggerable by ordinary astrophysical processes.
Your question is the kind of speculative chain-thinking that overlaps with real frontier physics more than you might think.
People don't realize how absurd this view actually is.
A camera. On a robot. On Mars.
Built by humans on a planet 140 million miles away, launched on a rocket, landed using a sky crane, and now driving across an alien desert taking pictures so detailed you can count the rocks.
100 years ago, your great-grandparents thought airplanes were a miracle.
You are scrolling past Mars on your phone.