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The mushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, 1945, rose some 18 km (11 mi) above the hypocenter.
A doomsday event is a specific occurrence which has an exceptionally destructive effect on the human race.[This definition of the expression "doomsday event" is directly derived from compounding the meanings of the adjective "doomsday" and noun "event":
]
- Wiktionary defines doomsday (adj) as "concerned with or predicting future universal destruction" or "capable of causing widespread or total destruction" and defines event (noun) as "an occurrence of social or personal importance," with occurrence (noun) defined in turn as "actual instance where a situation arises." (Retrieved Nov. 18, 2006)
- Random House Webster\'s Unabridged Electronic Dictionary (1989-1996) defines "doomsday" (adj) as "given to or marked by forebodings or predictions of impending calamity" and "capable of causing widespread or total destruction" and defines "event" (noun) as "something that happens or is regarded as happening; an occurrence, esp. one of some importance" or "something that occurs in a certain place during a particular interval of time."
The final outcomes of doomsday events may range from a major disruption of human civilization, to the extinction of human life, to the destruction of the planet Earth, to the annihilation of the entire universe.
A 2006 poll by SciFi.com revealed that virtually all Americans believed that some sort of doomsday scenario could realistically impact the human race, and that many feel that such a scenario is likely to be man-made.[The Doomsday Poll. SciFi.com (2006).]
Scenarios
Doomsday events may include:
Natural occurrences
These include:
- A drastic increase or decrease in the Sun\'s energy output
- A sudden change in the physical constants governing the universe, such as that created by a Vacuum metastability event
[S. Coleman and F. De Luccia (1980). "Gravitational effects on and of vacuum decay". Physical Review D21: 3305-3315. ]
Non-natural events
These include:
Supernatural events
These include:
See also
Notes
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia