The black holes from Gamma ray usually burst because of their energetic form.
Earth gets hit every day by gamma-ray bursts - from far, far away. Depending on how near the gamma-ray burst is, it may cause some serious damage.
It happens when two gamma rays come from different stars and collide and make a big explosion . A gamma ray burst is when two gamma rays come from different stars and collide and make a big explosion. BOOM
Mega Disasters - 2006 Gamma Ray Burst 2-3 was released on: USA: 18 September 2007
The earth would be completely destroyed.
your mom amf dimgksjdhg
At our current level of technology absolutely nothing.
A gamma ray burster emits an amount of gamma ray energy in one pulse roughly equal all EM radiation energy of a galaxy in a year. So yes.
A gamma-ray burst, or GRB, is one of the most energetic events in the universe. The Fireball model describes why GRBs tend to have high energy levels. It also explains the time scales that govern them and why they generate an afterglow.
A gamma ray burst results from an extremely energetic implosion/explosion, as in supernovae or hypernovae events, or the less likely possibility of the combination of 2 neutron stars.
I presume you mean a "gamma ray burst." This is a burst of gamma ray energy, lasting from less than a second to a few minutes, that comes from outside our galaxy. Despite being from that far away, they are measurable on our planet, meaning the energy release in one second of a gamma ray burst is greater than the energy that our Sun will release in its entire ten billion year life cycle. GRB's are now thought to be from the collapse of a massive star, but the question has not been completely settled. If a gamma ray burst from within our galaxy were to hit our Earth, all life on our planet, even bacteria, would end within a few days.
Its Gamma burst Ray which comes from the center of the universe.