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by ncmncm 1596 days ago
I wonder whether any organic life in a galaxy could survive merger of a pair of 1e9-solar-mass black holes. Would 25,000 light years be far enough out? 5,000? 500 light years is supposed to be the sterilization range of a minor magnetar hiccup, 5 light years for a workaday supernova, IIRC. We will soon find out how much energy is released in such a merger; one is about to happen in a year or three, about a billion light years out. Sadly, we will not have deployed a gravity-wave detector big enough to measure it with, by then, and will have to wait for the next one.

If life sorts more or less neatly into expansionist and sedentary cultures, the sedentary species will generally be much older and, typically, much more technologically advanced than the expansionists that try to encompass them. Aggressive expansionists will tend to be destroyed by the first, second, or anyway tenth sedentary culture they try to strong-arm. So, the galaxy is full of very old, sedentary cultures not interested in visiting us, and young expansionists popping up all the time and being obliterated before they reach us.