What's the most interesting space fact you know?

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: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )               https://youtu.be/uDF4cwAghAc
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็
Sagittarius B2 contains about 10 billion billion billion liters of alcohol


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Honestly I don't know a lot (other than common knowledge) about space off the top of my head. I know in Physics we learned things about orbits. I know that astronauts orbiting Earth aren't in a zero gravity environment, instead they are constantly accelerating towards it. There is a belt of satellites in geostationary orbit with the earths equator. And something about the earth, electromagnetism, the sun, and us dying. I wasn't in a Physics class for over a year so things are kind of fuzzy.

I know what you mean.

When the sun emits a solar flare, it's a stream of charged particles. If they collide with or atmosphere, they could ionise it and cause a worldwide EMP. Needless to say, knocking out the planet's electricity would be catastrophic.

Hell, at this point it could cause the collapse of civilization.


 
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Sagittarius B2 contains about 10 billion billion billion liters of alcohol

Sagittarius B2 is also full of a chemical called ethyl formate. Ethyl formate gives raspberries their taste and rum its smell.


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Honestly I don't know a lot (other than common knowledge) about space off the top of my head. I know in Physics we learned things about orbits. I know that astronauts orbiting Earth aren't in a zero gravity environment, instead they are constantly accelerating towards it. There is a belt of satellites in geostationary orbit with the earths equator. And something about the earth, electromagnetism, the sun, and us dying. I wasn't in a Physics class for over a year so things are kind of fuzzy.

I know what you mean.

When the sun emits a solar flare, it's a stream of charged particles. If they collide with or atmosphere, they could ionise it and cause a worldwide EMP. Needless to say, knocking out the planet's electricity would be catastrophic.

Hell, at this point it could cause the collapse of civilization.

*would


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Honestly I don't know a lot (other than common knowledge) about space off the top of my head. I know in Physics we learned things about orbits. I know that astronauts orbiting Earth aren't in a zero gravity environment, instead they are constantly accelerating towards it. There is a belt of satellites in geostationary orbit with the earths equator. And something about the earth, electromagnetism, the sun, and us dying. I wasn't in a Physics class for over a year so things are kind of fuzzy.

I know what you mean.

When the sun emits a solar flare, it's a stream of charged particles. If they collide with or atmosphere, they could ionise it and cause a worldwide EMP. Needless to say, knocking out the planet's electricity would be catastrophic.
Kind of. Isn't there an electromagnetic field flowing from our south to north poles that shields us from solar winds or something like that? I think we learned that if the poles flipped we might all die.

Here's a diagram
Last Edit: February 23, 2015, 05:19:47 PM by Rinev Jeqkogo


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Because at some point, some idiot will end up coming in like LOL UNIVERSE IS 6000 YEARS OLD SCIENCE A SHIT

This has literally nothing to do with what I said. My post has nothing to do with religion. The problem of vacuum energy is a really interesting discussion, and you just disregarded it because you assumed it was theological.

OT: Another interesting fact: Observed from any point in space, the rest of the universe appears to be expanding away from that point. Pic for example:

Spoiler
Last Edit: February 23, 2015, 05:20:03 PM by HurtfulTurkey


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Honestly I don't know a lot (other than common knowledge) about space off the top of my head. I know in Physics we learned things about orbits. I know that astronauts orbiting Earth aren't in a zero gravity environment, instead they are constantly accelerating towards it. There is a belt of satellites in geostationary orbit with the earths equator. And something about the earth, electromagnetism, the sun, and us dying. I wasn't in a Physics class for over a year so things are kind of fuzzy.

I know what you mean.

When the sun emits a solar flare, it's a stream of charged particles. If they collide with or atmosphere, they could ionise it and cause a worldwide EMP. Needless to say, knocking out the planet's electricity would be catastrophic.
Kind of. Isn't there an electromagnetic field flowing from our south to north poles that shields us from solar winds or something like that? I think we learned that if the poles flipped we might all die.

Here's a diagram



Well, it would wreak havoc on any instrument that was affected by our magnetic field- planes, ships, satellites, everything like that would die.


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: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )               https://youtu.be/uDF4cwAghAc
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็
system CID-42 launched its black hole away, millions of miles per hour when the two galaxies collided together

this black hole is likely still moving at that same speed, destroying anything in its path

YouTube


here is a video on how it happened


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The sun revolves around the earth and the earth is flat.


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Because at some point, some idiot will end up coming in like LOL UNIVERSE IS 6000 YEARS OLD SCIENCE A SHIT

This has literally nothing to do with what I said. My post has nothing to do with religion. The problem of vacuum energy is a really interesting discussion, and you just disregarded it because you assumed it was theological.

OT: Another interesting fact: Observed from any point in space, the rest of the universe appears to be expanding away from that point. Pic for example:

Spoiler

Everywhere could be considered the center of the universe.


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: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )               https://youtu.be/uDF4cwAghAc
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ )
: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็: ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็ ) : ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็
the red giant Mira is a literal shooting star moving at 291,000 miles per hour, with a tail that is 13 light years long


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It may be possible to survive for a while in the event horizon of a supermassive black hole, due to them having less extreme surfaces than normal black holes. If you had a black hole the size of our solar system, the tidal forces wouldn't be that strong, so your structural integrity could be maintained. Things would get pretty weird. You would get to experience the effects of the curvature of space-time, firsthand.

You approach the speed of light as you fall into the black hole, so the faster you move through space, the slower you move through time. Furthermore, as you fall, there are things that have been falling in front of you that have experienced an even greater 'time dilation' than you have. So if you're able to look forward toward the black hole, you see every object that has fallen into it in the past. And then if you look backwards, you'll be able to see everything that will ever fall into the black hole behind you. Mind blowing.

A cube of bookshelves is at the center of every black hole

#truefacts


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Because at some point, some idiot will end up coming in like LOL UNIVERSE IS 6000 YEARS OLD SCIENCE A SHIT

This has literally nothing to do with what I said. My post has nothing to do with religion. The problem of vacuum energy is a really interesting discussion, and you just disregarded it because you assumed it was theological.

OT: Another interesting fact: Observed from any point in space, the rest of the universe appears to be expanding away from that point. Pic for example:

Spoiler


Well in that case, my bad.

Yeah, expansion is scary, espcaially when considering in about 100 billion years the acceleration will reach light speed and we won be able to see anything outside of our own galaxy.


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I like hugs and making the world a better place. That and guns. Lots and lots of guns.
Betelgeuse going supernova one day. That shits supposed to be brighter than the moon for several weeks and will even be visible in the day time. Gonna be so cool. Just imagine seeing it hen it actually happens. Just looking into the sky and seeing this silent space explosion come up out of nowhere.


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Because at some point, some idiot will end up coming in like LOL UNIVERSE IS 6000 YEARS OLD SCIENCE A SHIT

This has literally nothing to do with what I said. My post has nothing to do with religion. The problem of vacuum energy is a really interesting discussion, and you just disregarded it because you assumed it was theological.

OT: Another interesting fact: Observed from any point in space, the rest of the universe appears to be expanding away from that point. Pic for example:

Spoiler


Well in that case, my bad.

Yeah, expansion is scary, espcaially when considering in about 100 billion years the acceleration will reach light speed and we won be able to see anything outside of our own galaxy.

I thought it was speculated the universe's expansion rate was faster than the speed of light?


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Because at some point, some idiot will end up coming in like LOL UNIVERSE IS 6000 YEARS OLD SCIENCE A SHIT

This has literally nothing to do with what I said. My post has nothing to do with religion. The problem of vacuum energy is a really interesting discussion, and you just disregarded it because you assumed it was theological.

OT: Another interesting fact: Observed from any point in space, the rest of the universe appears to be expanding away from that point. Pic for example:

Spoiler


Well in that case, my bad.

Yeah, expansion is scary, espcaially when considering in about 100 billion years the acceleration will reach light speed and we won be able to see anything outside of our own galaxy.

I thought it was speculated the universe's expansion rate was faster than the speed of light?

No. It's accelerating- if it were faster than 3x10^8m/s, then we wouldn't be able to see other stars or galaxies. Of course, it could have already reached that point but we won't know until one day, andromeda just suddenly disaapears. However, we can see galaxies that are trillions of ly away and none of them are disappearing so expansion hasn't reached light speed yet.


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I thought it was speculated the universe's expansion rate was faster than the speed of light?

Yeah, it totally is. The physical bodies aren't actually moving at a velocity faster than light, but space is expanding so fast that it appears that objects are moving that quickly. Like drawing two dots on either side of a balloon, inflating it, and saying that the points aren't moving, but the space they're on is expanding.


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The angel agreed to trade a set of white wings for the head of another demon. Overjoyed, the demon killed one of his own and plucked the head right off its still-warm body.

The angel then led the demon to heaven, where he underwent centuries of the cruelest tortures imaginable. Finally, the pain was so great that he lost consciousness - at which point his dark wings turned the promised shade of white.
I dunno a lot. Black holes and dark matter are cool and stuff.


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Betelgeuse going supernova one day. That shits supposed to be brighter than the moon for several weeks and will even be visible in the day time. Gonna be so cool. Just imagine seeing it hen it actually happens. Just looking into the sky and seeing this silent space explosion come up out of nowhere.


And the sad thing is we won't be around to see it.


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My stupidity is self evident.
That face when most of my physical knowledge isn't astronomical but theoretical and applied. Erm. . .

Cosmology counts. Ok I assume most of you have heard of the heat death of the universe, right? Essentially its the "final state" of the universe where it asymptotically acquires perfect equilibrium, no energy gradients nothing can happen. What most folks don't take into account is that thermodynamical law is statistical. Entropy basically being based on the fact that there are more ways(it's more likely) for a system to acquire a "disordered" state than for it to acquire an "orderly" one(order is in quotes because its not really correct but I can't think of a another way to get across what I'm saying).

What this means is that there is a vanishing but nonzero chance for an isolated system in equilibrium, "heat death", to acquire minimal or near minimal entropy, purely by chance. Apparently the reccurrence time for the quantum state of a blackhole the mass of our observable universe is somewhere on the order of 10^10^10^10^13 years. . .

It's prudent to point out that our universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre-big bang state before this amount of time elapses. It's also prudent to point out that this based on certain assumptions about our universe that may not be supported by later theories.


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My stupidity is self evident.
The cosmological constant of the universe is precisely fine-tuned to not only the capability of life to form, but for the universe to have not collapsed immediately after the Big Bang, to the scale of 120 orders of magnitude, and that there is nothing close to an explanation for this.

Please don't start trying to ruin what is currently an amazing thread. Also, if you're a believer in the multiverse theory, then the formation of a universe that can support life is a mathmatical certainty.

He's right though.

And to me an unobservable multiverse is about as unsatisfying an explanation as an unobservable god is. I would't totally rule it tho because it does sort of drop out of certain theories on its own. If inflation is proven correct it's probably a certainty, not sure how I feel about that.


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I like hugs and making the world a better place. That and guns. Lots and lots of guns.
Betelgeuse going supernova one day. That shits supposed to be brighter than the moon for several weeks and will even be visible in the day time. Gonna be so cool. Just imagine seeing it hen it actually happens. Just looking into the sky and seeing this silent space explosion come up out of nowhere.


And the sad thing is we won't be around to see it.
We don't know that. We don't know exactly when it will blow. It could blow sooner or later.


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Betelgeuse going supernova one day. That shits supposed to be brighter than the moon for several weeks and will even be visible in the day time. Gonna be so cool. Just imagine seeing it hen it actually happens. Just looking into the sky and seeing this silent space explosion come up out of nowhere.
Imagine the science news websites trying to do damage control so people don't think the world is ending.


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That face when most of my physical knowledge isn't astronomical but theoretical and applied. Erm. . .

Cosmology counts. Ok I assume most of you have heard of the heat death of the universe, right? Essentially its the "final state" of the universe where it asymptotically acquires perfect equilibrium, no energy gradients nothing can happen. What most folks don't take into account is that thermodynamical law is statistical. Entropy basically being based on the fact that there are more ways(it's more likely) for a system to acquire a "disordered" state than for it to acquire an "orderly" one(order is in quotes because its not really correct but I can't think of a another way to get across what I'm saying).

What this means is that there is a vanishing but nonzero chance for an isolated system in equilibrium, "heat death", to acquire minimal or near minimal entropy, purely by chance. Apparently the reccurrence time for the quantum state of a blackhole the mass of our observable universe is somewhere on the order of 10^10^10^10^13 years. . .

It's prudent to point out that our universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre-big bang state before this amount of time elapses. It's also prudent to point out that this based on certain assumptions about our universe that may not be supported by later theories.

Heat death is something I'm very interested in. Over those massive time scales improbabilities like the Boltzmann brain could potentially form.


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Betelgeuse going supernova one day. That shits supposed to be brighter than the moon for several weeks and will even be visible in the day time. Gonna be so cool. Just imagine seeing it hen it actually happens. Just looking into the sky and seeing this silent space explosion come up out of nowhere.


And the sad thing is we won't be around to see it.
We don't know that. We don't know exactly when it will blow. It could blow sooner or later.

It could have already blown but the light has yet to reach us.


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My stupidity is self evident.
That face when most of my physical knowledge isn't astronomical but theoretical and applied. Erm. . .

Cosmology counts. Ok I assume most of you have heard of the heat death of the universe, right? Essentially its the "final state" of the universe where it asymptotically acquires perfect equilibrium, no energy gradients nothing can happen. What most folks don't take into account is that thermodynamical law is statistical. Entropy basically being based on the fact that there are more ways(it's more likely) for a system to acquire a "disordered" state than for it to acquire an "orderly" one(order is in quotes because its not really correct but I can't think of a another way to get across what I'm saying).

What this means is that there is a vanishing but nonzero chance for an isolated system in equilibrium, "heat death", to acquire minimal or near minimal entropy, purely by chance. Apparently the reccurrence time for the quantum state of a blackhole the mass of our observable universe is somewhere on the order of 10^10^10^10^13 years. . .

It's prudent to point out that our universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre-big bang state before this amount of time elapses. It's also prudent to point out that this based on certain assumptions about our universe that may not be supported by later theories.

Heat death is something I'm very interested in. Over those massive time scales improbabilities like the Boltzmann brain could potentially form.
Do you read Sean Carrol's blog? He talks about that a lot. From my understanding the universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre big bang state long before Boltzmann brains become a major observer probability skewing phenomenon. There's also the fact that know one really knows how an accelerating universe affects conclusions like heat death. I mean can an exponentially expanding system reach perfect equilibrium?


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That face when most of my physical knowledge isn't astronomical but theoretical and applied. Erm. . .

Cosmology counts. Ok I assume most of you have heard of the heat death of the universe, right? Essentially its the "final state" of the universe where it asymptotically acquires perfect equilibrium, no energy gradients nothing can happen. What most folks don't take into account is that thermodynamical law is statistical. Entropy basically being based on the fact that there are more ways(it's more likely) for a system to acquire a "disordered" state than for it to acquire an "orderly" one(order is in quotes because its not really correct but I can't think of a another way to get across what I'm saying).

What this means is that there is a vanishing but nonzero chance for an isolated system in equilibrium, "heat death", to acquire minimal or near minimal entropy, purely by chance. Apparently the reccurrence time for the quantum state of a blackhole the mass of our observable universe is somewhere on the order of 10^10^10^10^13 years. . .

It's prudent to point out that our universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre-big bang state before this amount of time elapses. It's also prudent to point out that this based on certain assumptions about our universe that may not be supported by later theories.

Heat death is something I'm very interested in. Over those massive time scales improbabilities like the Boltzmann brain could potentially form.
Do you read Sean Carrol's blog? He talks about that a lot. From my understanding the universe is more likely to quantum tunnel back to a pre big bang state long before Boltzmann brains become a major observer probability skewing phenomenon. There's also the fact that know one really knows how an accelerating universe affects conclusions like heat death. I mean can an exponentially expanding system reach perfect equilibrium?

I think the universe will quantum tunnel back into a pre big bang state, as well, after an enormous amount of time.

But it's also possible we are in a false vacuum.