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remotelove, do astronomy w New dwarf planet spotted at the edge of the solar system
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

They didn’t change the reference, they defined an AU.

remotelove, do astronomy w Gaia Discovered Hidden Galaxies INSIDE Our Milky Way
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Yo dawg, I heard you like galaxies…

remotelove, do astronomy w Juno reveals dozens of lava lakes on Jupiter’s moon Io
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Factorio players rejoice.

remotelove, do astronomy w Atmospheric analysis shows Venus never had Earth-like life, scientists say
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

It was overshadowed by the first bit where you said “by definition, impossible”. It kinda boned the delivery, TBH.

remotelove, do astronomy w Atmospheric analysis shows Venus never had Earth-like life, scientists say
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Earth-like is a very broad term. If an organism has something similar to DNA or shared any kind of chemical processes it could be “earth-like”.

As an odd hypothetical example, there is a theory that fungi could potentially spread from planet to planet. Even with a billion or so years of independent evolution, fungi on Venus and fungi on Earth could still share some of the same traits.

remotelove, do astronomy w Dark Matter Black Holes Could Fly through the Solar System Once a Decade
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

I called that out. It was the weight of the earth… on earth.

remotelove, do astronomy w Dark Matter Black Holes Could Fly through the Solar System Once a Decade
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

The earth is estimated to “weigh” 13,170,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 pounds. (That is weird when you think about it. The weight of the earth being based on what something weighs on earth, I mean.)

Mt. Everest is only about 357,000,000,000,000 pounds and is just a tiny fraction of the mass of the earth.

So. My point is that we need a better way to portray scale of things in the universe. AUs work to a point but then we have to quickly move to parsecs. Parsecs quickly give way to light years. (Or vice-versa, depending on how you visualize things better.) Light years kinda work, but only for between 14-26 billion years. Even after all of that, I can hardly still fathom the size of Mt. Everest. (This was a rant, but not an angry rant.)

remotelove, (edited ) do games w Me and a friend of mine were having a discussion on the holocaust and got banned for mentioning the N word. This is not the first time in games. How come they censor it?
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

While I haven’t seen the previous conversation, looking at the title of this post and also at the title of the community, that leads me to believe that this may not be a community for political history.

Since many historical events (especially in regards to politics) may be controversial, painful, horrendously offensive, stressful or annoying, that also leads me to believe some people might have gotten pissed off reading that stuff in this particular community.

That is my best guess.

remotelove, do gaming w Thanks Reddit. I'll continue to not provide any content since I shredded everything pre-enshitification.
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Your post on Reddit reads like an advertisement™️ and karma requirements have been on subs for years. It’s to limit bots with zero karma that typically post spam advertisments. This is a moderator controlled function, usually.

Don’t misunderstand me. I’ll hate on Reddit any day of the week but my complaints need to be educated.

remotelove, do games w Free Stars: The Ur-Quan Masters released on Steam
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Fuck yes! The was one of my favorite games when I was much younger.

Online PvP now? Wow. Prodigy was still in its heyday when I was playing this.

remotelove, do astronomy w Doomed US lunar lander now headed for Earth: company
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar
remotelove, do astronomy w 'Old smokers': Strange new type of star discovered in Milky Way
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

Of course! I was super curious myself.

Teachers generally want to teach so I have had great success reaching out to various people like that.

I don’t abuse that, of course. Keeping questions short and being respectful of their time is a huge plus, in my experience.

remotelove, do astronomy w 'Old smokers': Strange new type of star discovered in Milky Way
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar
remotelove, do astronomy w 'Old smokers': Strange new type of star discovered in Milky Way
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

So, in my typical nature, I went right to the source and shot off an email to Professor Philip Lucas from the University of Hertfordshire. He was one of the primary researchers for the original paper. (P.W. Lucas et al.)

If he responds, I’ll post it here.

remotelove, do astronomy w 'Old smokers': Strange new type of star discovered in Milky Way
@remotelove@lemmy.ca avatar

I missed it at first as well. The second paragraph implies they are red giants. However, there is a distinction between a red giant and a red super-giant, if that is what you mean.

The “peculiar” puffing behavior of these stars has never been seen before in such red giants, astrophysicist Philip Lucas told AFP.

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