by Psnarf » Sun May 18, 2014 2:30 pm
Van Gogh "Starry Night"? If you go to the Van Gogh wiki page, there is an image of "Starry Night" 30,000 × 23,756 pixels.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Van_ ... roject.jpg
Therein you can zoom into the stars and examine how the paint was applied (of interest to artists). They appear a lot like that Great Yellow-orange Spot from V'Ger.
Sea spot. Sea spot run. *ouch!*
I imagine the force of gravity on anything at the surface would render the substance into something more than solid, perhaps a metalic gas? A three-dimensional image would help. Is the vortex sinking clockwise? If so, why is the coriolis effect on Jupiter's southern hemisphere the same as on Earth's? How can the physics be the same with such enormous gravitational forces? We don't know how deep into the planet we would have to go before finding anything like a solid sphere. Judging by the way the pieces of comet Shoemaker-Levy exploded, I'd venture to guess that the surface itself is composed of some sort of solid that moves as if it were molten glass. But then, I'm dumb enough to suggest that any equation describing the gravitational force near the singlularity of a supermassive black hole which contains a 1/0 term is not infinity, but undefined and mathematically incorrect. I'm still trying to grasp the concept of a solid sea spot.
Van Gogh "Starry Night"? If you go to the Van Gogh wiki page, there is an image of "Starry Night" 30,000 × 23,756 pixels. [url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Van_Gogh_-_Starry_Night_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg[/url]
Therein you can zoom into the stars and examine how the paint was applied (of interest to artists). They appear a lot like that Great Yellow-orange Spot from V'Ger.
Sea spot. Sea spot run. *ouch!*
I imagine the force of gravity on anything at the surface would render the substance into something more than solid, perhaps a metalic gas? A three-dimensional image would help. Is the vortex sinking clockwise? If so, why is the coriolis effect on Jupiter's southern hemisphere the same as on Earth's? How can the physics be the same with such enormous gravitational forces? We don't know how deep into the planet we would have to go before finding anything like a solid sphere. Judging by the way the pieces of comet Shoemaker-Levy exploded, I'd venture to guess that the surface itself is composed of some sort of solid that moves as if it were molten glass. But then, I'm dumb enough to suggest that any equation describing the gravitational force near the singlularity of a supermassive black hole which contains a 1/0 term is not infinity, but undefined and mathematically incorrect. I'm still trying to grasp the concept of a solid sea spot.