If the logged times are correct for those two entries, it would appear the unexplained bluescreen event is almost immediate, though in your initial post you indicated "part of the way thru my machine will reboot", so which description is accurate?
It doesn't matter whether the machine is old or even brand new out of the box, it can still have cooling system issues due to inadequate design or processor installation issues as simple as inappropriate thermal tape or paste. However, this would obviously be unlikely if the shutdown occurs within the first minute or two after the scan begins.
Once you get into interpreting events you're beyond the knowledge of most monitoring these specific forums, though there are other forums relating to Windows 10 where others frequently investigate these including the associated crash dump files. Not saying no one will respond, just that it's less likely here.
Whatever's going on might relate to either hardware or damaged operating system software, but unless the shutdown is immediate I still suspect it may relate to overheating, whether due to inadequate cooling or simply an improper configuration of the processor speed controlling portions of the BIOS, including settings relating to virtual machine operation that at least used to interact with these by disabling them, forcing the processor cores into high-speed operation.
As I mentioned initially, there's a number of things that can cause this, but the most common when some usually variable time passes before the crash occurs is overheating. If it always occurs in exactly the same time frame, it's more likely due to something like either damaged software or or other specific files being scanned, which can include malware, though the latter is extremely rare.
The reason I suggested the processor thermal monitoring apps is that this is relatively easy to do on your own and completely rules that out if it's not already unlikely due to an immediate shutdown. You can waste lots of time and effort by yourself and others if the problem is actually overheating, so I'd still try one of those apps first if the timeframe is long enough (at least a few minutes) to create some heating of the cores.
The architecture of that i9-10980XE Extreme Edition processor in your system incudes 18 cores, operating at a base frequency of 3.00 GHz, with a Max Turbo Frequency of 4.60 Ghz and Turbo Boost Ma Technology 3.0 Frequency of 4.80 Ghz, dissipating 165 Watts when all cores are operating at base frequency.
Intel® Core™ i9-10980XE Extreme Edition Processor 198017
My point in including the above is that Intel stopped producing processors a couple decades ago that operated above 3 GHz, since these were known to be crash prone and require extreme cooling system designs that often didn't perform properly. Obviously this processor indicates that they've returned to this unsuccessful practice of the past, likely believing that those producing machines using these will understand these issues and produce cooling systems that can manage the heating involved.
I personally used to work for a white box manufacturer around the time those issues were prevalent and so understand how untrue it is that companies fully understand the thermal issues involved. So personally I wouldn't take the system's design at the company's word and use this as an opportunity to confirm that their cooling system design works as expected.
I didn't previously explain that Microsoft's highly efficient malware scanning software initially began creating problems with older systems running Windows XP due to its performing most operations in memory rather than being dependent on disk as had been common in earlier designs. This and the later use of multiple cores by both the operating system and the scanning engines themselves led to far more heating than most processors experience during any other common application's typical operation.
That's why it's often only when a long period of scanning due to the selection of a full scan is made that such a shutdown first occurs. We often spent days at that time trying to convince people to test for this same issue of overheating, with only a relatively tiny number turning out to be something else.
Rob