egregiouscodswallop
egregiouscodswallop t1_ja1iu17 wrote
Reply to Explosions in space movies? by DemonOfTheAstroWaste
I pretend it's some sci-fi substance that burns like that in space
egregiouscodswallop t1_j9k3ih9 wrote
Reply to Russian President Vladimir Putin unwittingly accelerated the European Unionโs green transition with his war in Ukraine, with the 27-nation bloc reducing its dependency on Russian fossil fuels and increasing its renewable energy use over the past year, the EUโs climate czar said Tuesday. by MrGuttFeeling
Damn! There goes my conspiracy theory that Russia maintains a war footing in order to force the American military into constant production which speeds up global warming in order to unfreeze Siberia, revealing enormous swaths of arable farmland.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j97o1di wrote
Image on the left looks like a mathematical primer that an advanced civ would leave behind for apes like us.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j75mmd6 wrote
egregiouscodswallop t1_j6byq8v wrote
Reply to comment by Surgical_Precisizmn in Ever wondered if we could grow a city out of mushrooms? ๐ by Successful_Smoke5013
It's not like we're having regular human babies
egregiouscodswallop t1_j5uffub wrote
I'm too young to remember the Challenger personally but here are two theories when it comes to making documentaries: 1) his public appearance made him seem important at the time, but he was essentially a mouthpiece for others who were more entrenched in the story and 2) the creators could be either too old or too young, either assuming everyone would already know him or that he was some irrelevant character since he never came up during interviews. Either way, sounds like he could have been cut for time. Especially if his role was mainly media based since media offer us a window to the drama and the documentarian was already backstage in the thick of it.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j5iduxg wrote
Reply to The Fyre Festival fraudster is launching his latest thing, and it looks like a party on an island by Worldly_Pirate_9817
Love that he and Anna Delvey are back on their bullshit at the same time. Kindred spirits!
egregiouscodswallop t1_j5a6jmt wrote
Since the explosive forces, swirling gasses, and gravitational rotations create a total force that is NOT spherical, there is likely a window of time when part of your blackhole requires an FTL escape velocity while the other hemisphere still lets loose photons and gamma rays. So a critical atom (singular)? No, probably not. There is also an accretion disc around blackholes which block and reflect light back into the central mass. So for a non-zero amount of time, the blackhole is not trapping photons but the blackhole system (the Greater Metropolitan Blackhole) does effectively trap everything.
Tl;dr there would be a window of time and mass during which your escape velocity is sub c but nothing escapes AND/OR your escape velocity reaches c but not uniformly in a sphere.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j3kbxd5 wrote
Typical! My company did an event for some NFT and they tried to sue us for their money back because their value collapsed after the event. Our part was just making the venue look sexy and, boy howdy, we did. The value tanking likely had to do with wind blowing or the sun rising since that's now NFTs work.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j32vxlw wrote
Reply to comment by yackofalltradescoach in TIL that all the gold that has ever been mined in all of human history could fill about three Olympic-sized swimming pools. by westondeboer
Or a durak deck!
egregiouscodswallop t1_j2vfews wrote
Reply to Why did the scientists of any country go to the moon, they saw something there, then we, who do not go because of its fear, do not find anything on the moon, but they search the blocks on the earth too, but you do not search on the moon. people what happened on the moon by forexpost
Really interesting points. Extremely in-depth analysis. This honestly might be the smartest thing on Reddit, maybe a little bit too smart for me since I absolutely have no idea what you mean or what you even were trying to convey.
egregiouscodswallop t1_j2dxqgo wrote
Reply to TIL John Steinbeck IV wrote an article in January 1968 about marijuana usage among the troops. This set off a media firestorm, & the Army began clamping down on marijuana usage, arresting ~1000 G.I.s a week for possession. Many G.I.s switched to heroin, which was odorless and thus harder to detect. by The_Critical_Cynic
Another Steinbeck work that caused way more pain than necessary. The primary work being Grapes of Wrath
egregiouscodswallop t1_j1tgnxe wrote
Reply to comment by MaybeTheDoctor in "Speed up" terraforming of Mars by using Enceladus' icy crust? by LumberjackWeezy
Very true, very true! I've always envisioned the belt as the first real shipping yard, interplanetary dock, and shipbuilding facility for our solar system. Keeping it free floating to create ships entirely in space, that's the real benefit. Have you read the Artemis by Andy weir?
egregiouscodswallop t1_j1tdain wrote
Crash ten thousand asteroids into Mars and you: 1) slightly increase it's gravity closer to 1 g, 2) launch particulate matter into the atmosphere to make it thicker and potentially warmer, 3) bring in other minerals and water, 4) reshape the landscape clumsily but selectively, 5) potentially collapse tunnel systems, 6) reveal some but erase much geologic data, and 7) reduce the overall mass of the asteroid belt.
But do the same with Enceladus and you lose a unique moon that could be used for something else entirely.
egregiouscodswallop t1_izya8jg wrote
Reply to comment by RufusCranium in Researchers developed a way to monitor blood pressure (with 90% accuracy), using artificial intelligence and a camera, by filming a person from a short distance for 10 seconds and extracting cardiac signals from two regions in the forehead by giuliomagnifico
Just what we needed. A "health" screening tool for every airport, crosswalk, and front door.
egregiouscodswallop t1_iz42i87 wrote
Reply to TIL "The Twelve Days of Christmas" STARTS on Christmas Day, and ends of January 5th (Three Kings Day). by HauntedHippie
Tell this to stores that hit the Green and Red in October!
egregiouscodswallop t1_iyl8tsh wrote
Reply to comment by tom-8-to in Gold from ancient Troy, Poliochni and Ur had the same origin by Darth_Kahuna
Thanks for giving me something to Google
egregiouscodswallop t1_iyawmha wrote
Reply to comment by KonigVonMurmeltiere in Astronomers Worldwide Troubled by New 'Cell Phone Towers in Space' by IslandChillin
๐๐๐ Good explanation! Thank you for teaching me something cool today. Our little potato is clocking itself against galaxies to tell us how potato we are from day to day.
egregiouscodswallop t1_iy6pqwv wrote
Reply to comment by _verixsans in what would be different if we had two moons by Any_Palpitation_3110
I think we'd go to Moon 1 first and Moon 2 second, if only because those are the only names we could think of
egregiouscodswallop t1_ixsh78j wrote
Reply to comment by lolwutpear in Polarization around climate change is growing on Twitter. Since COP21, engagement with climate sceptics has grown 4 times faster than pro-climate content. At the same time, criticism of the COP summits as a failure has grown 5-fold. by fractalfalcon
Yeah, trolling and phishing. Cyber Security 101 type stuff.
egregiouscodswallop t1_ixqbtha wrote
Reply to Polarization around climate change is growing on Twitter. Since COP21, engagement with climate sceptics has grown 4 times faster than pro-climate content. At the same time, criticism of the COP summits as a failure has grown 5-fold. by fractalfalcon
Remember that when you measure public sentiment or the focus of public discourse by using Twitter, you are measuring robots designed to inflate those numbers and give those results. You are literally falling for the internet's third most obvious trick and it's sad that you can't see it
egregiouscodswallop t1_ixmptj5 wrote
Reply to Space travel Shielding by Actual-Macaroon8240
Alistair Reynolds uses ice shields. Essentially, the front of the ship is coated in meters of ice while in space. Holes are easy to repair by melting then refreezing the shield. It acts as a backup water supply if it's water ice. If it's not water, it's probably common and cheap. Either way, it gets added in space so this idea requires space-based shipyards. It helps that the ships are also thin and long, smaller profile to protect
egregiouscodswallop t1_ixjzl5j wrote
Reply to comment by sanjsrik in Dolphins Shrug Off Hot Sauce-Spiked Nets | Science by CaptainPeachfuzz
Laughed at today, lauded in the future.
I hope this becomes the common-sense solution to so many animal problems and that people see your comment in the future and exclaim, "See! There were smart ones back then too!"
egregiouscodswallop t1_ixjzf42 wrote
Reply to comment by kavien in Dolphins Shrug Off Hot Sauce-Spiked Nets | Science by CaptainPeachfuzz
And we're seasoning it for them!
But for real, I think the main concern is catching dolphins which is probably unlawful and comes with a ton of paperwork and maybe even a side of guilt. I figured the hot sauce was to ward them away to avoid an illegal catch.
egregiouscodswallop t1_ja1y0rr wrote
Reply to comment by EnoughMeasurement499 in Explosions in space movies? by DemonOfTheAstroWaste
You know, I know what you mean because I also have to pretend that it's a movie.