2012 is the last year of the human world?

There are quite a lot of Apocalypse hypotheses all pointing to the 2012 figure. Is it true that we only exist for about a year?

Is this true? Here are some famous hypotheses (scientific or not) about Apocalypse.

Collision of asteroids

This is the most plausible 'scenario' of the Apocalypse in 2012. Accordingly, a large asteroid will collide with the Earth, creating a greater cataclysm than the disaster that swept away the species. Previous dinosaurs.

The only problem with this scenario is whether any asteroids with the right size and orbit can be a real threat to us.

Earlier this year, scientists saw a large asteroid within a radius of 8,000 miles from the Earth. In addition, the nearest asteroid found by experts is 99942 Apophis, 270m in diameter and has 1 / 250,000 opportunities to collide with the Earth in 2036.

The danger from the sun

Some professional studies have warned that it is very likely that a large solar sparks will come out of the scope of activity and 'lick' to Earth, wiping out all life on our planet.

The evidence for this hypothesis is that research results have shown that solar energy will peak in the 11-year cycle around the end of 2012.

In June this year, a similar phenomenon happened but fortunately did not target the Earth.

Picture 1 of 2012 is the last year of the human world?

The polarity reverses

In addition to the dangers from the outside, we can also take the risk from our own planet.

According to the hypothesis, the Arctic and Antarctic of the Earth will reverse, causing a series of displacement phenomena of soil and water on the planet's surface.

The basis of this speculation is that the magnetic field on our planet has also been reversed several thousand times throughout history. However, this has never been related to extinction. Moreover, there is no evidence that this phenomenon is imminent.

Therefore, unless there is a collision with sufficient power, the Earth will be almost impossible to reverse up next year.

Legend of Ragnarök of Northern Europeans

Unlike the Mayans, the Nordic people gave a rough outline for the final day of the world with a series of catastrophic disasters, and the end was that all would be engulfed completely underwater.

In this story, it is possible to see a trace of truth based on predictions of an increasingly hot world as a result of climate change. However, few people think that this will be a disaster for Earth in the next few years.

The prophecy of Nostradamus

Michel de Nostredame, known as Nostradamus, is known for its prophecies based on its own interpretation of astrology.

In his book "Prophecy" published in 1555, Nostradamus pointed out a 'route' to the end of the world, including the London fire in 1666, the scientific discoveries of Louis Pasteur, and the rise of Napoleon and Hitler.

However, many scientists argue that speculations based on Nostradamus's work are not entirely credible because the meaning of the words in the book can be distorted and deliberately interpreted.

Judgment Day in the Bible

Among the non-scientific hypotheses of the apocalypse, the writings of the Revelation of the Bible are most believable and most often deduced.

With metaphorical images - a woman who is pregnant and gives birth to a child, a serpent, an animal in the sea, an animal on land - the biblical story can 'transform' into a lot of 'plays'. copies' depend on each person's imagination.

Despite the lack of a scientific basis, the Judgment Day assumption belongs to one of the world's largest religious ideologies, so many people know and believe it.

Isaac Newton's prediction

Isaac Newton - a famous English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, alchemist and theologian, who predicted that the world would go through a big fluctuations in 2060.

Newton had quite a number of accurate predictions based on his own calculations such as the time of formation and existence of the Church. At the end of his life, the scientist wrote the number 2060 in predicting Earth.

Of course, whether it is scientific or not, the hypothesis is still a hypothesis. We can only conclude the hypothesis true or false when the exact time comes. After all, believing or not believing in the predictions about the last day of the Earth still depends on each person's point of view.