Sometimes you really Quark me up
What did you see on the web today?
- Ron-Astro Pharmacist
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Vitamin B3 from space.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niacin
It's interesting that a form of it is in need of investigation right here on Earth – to find out if it could be a key to better living.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niacin
It's interesting that a form of it is in need of investigation right here on Earth – to find out if it could be a key to better living.
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- Ron-Astro Pharmacist
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
The hype is starting to accelerate for "The Martian". I hope the movie can come close to the fun of the book.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronom ... entry.html
Do the astronauts in the ISS temporarily feel the effects of gravity when it's thrusted to a higher orbit? I guess I never have seen images of that particular event.
Do the astronauts in the ISS temporarily feel the effects of gravity when it's thrusted to a higher orbit? I guess I never have seen images of that particular event.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badas ... s-a-boost/Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:
Do the astronauts in the ISS temporarily feel the effects of gravity when it's thrusted to a higher orbit? I guess I never have seen images of that particular event.
Yes, but only very slightly. Or rather, no ... it's not acceleration due to gravity, but acceleration due to engine thrust.
- Ron-Astro Pharmacist
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Thanks Nitpicker – I suspect those on the ISS really do have a better feeling for the differences between gravity and acceleration.Nitpicker wrote:http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badas ... s-a-boost/Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:
Do the astronauts in the ISS temporarily feel the effects of gravity when it's thrusted to a higher orbit? I guess I never have seen images of that particular event.
Yes, but only very slightly. Or rather, no ... it's not acceleration due to gravity, but acceleration due to engine thrust.
I have a better understanding of the new goals at CERN following last night's 60 Minutes but still hate commercials advertising medications though, in some ways, both are introducing information to a subset of a population ill-informed to grasp it thoroughly. I hope they find extra-dimensions before I leave for one. It might help if it's known they exist.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
The more I read about the direction theory is heading toward describing extra dimensions - the more plausible it seems that we can't sense all that is. I am tempted to call that "nonsense" but that would be senseless.
Perhaps some sort of multisense will make it common sense though I suspect that may not be a direction congruent with Asterisk's. In the end it's just as hard to know the boundary between science and philosophy as it is to delve into the other dimensions - the more I read.
Perhaps some sort of multisense will make it common sense though I suspect that may not be a direction congruent with Asterisk's. In the end it's just as hard to know the boundary between science and philosophy as it is to delve into the other dimensions - the more I read.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
I do like new theories. Here's one from a very famous source. http://www.businessinsider.com/lisa-ran ... ry-2015-11 That would be Lisa Randall not Business Insider.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
That dark matter theory has been widely poo-poo'ed by various scientists. Fun stuff, though.
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Thanks for the insight Geck.geckzilla wrote:That dark matter theory has been widely poo-poo'ed by various scientists. Fun stuff, though.
I ran across this photo in this week's HEASARC Picture of the Week.
http://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/Fermi_5_year.jpg
Quite 3D! I don't think I've ever noticed it being shown so vividly.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?t=31967Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote: I ran across this photo in this week's HEASARC Picture of the Week.
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?t=35370
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
- Ron-Astro Pharmacist
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... yesterday/
I suppose competition has always been present when it comes to humans so why wouldn't it affect astronomy as well. Hopefully as these rivalries are exposed to the public eye they will find a way to resolve themselves.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Guess this proves that the Earth isn't a black hole. Or my head is.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Will this go in the " Who ordered that file?" We could only be so lucky if it turns out to be something unexpectedly interesting. Ok I'm done for the day
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Want to leave Earth soon for a journey to the stars?
Sounds like we are stuck with just eating one. That's a little hard to digest.
Sounds like we are stuck with just eating one. That's a little hard to digest.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
That was a very good, levelheaded, clear-eyed article about the actual difficulties that would meet humans trying to travel to another solar system to establish a second Earth.Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:Want to leave Earth soon for a journey to the stars?
Sounds like we are stuck with just eating one. That's a little hard to digest.
The very first thing that really, really impressed me about space was the sheer inconceivable size of it. It wasn't any of the objects inside it, although I've certainly grown interested in many of the objects in it since then. Mars! Jupiter! Saturn! Pluto! Sirius! The Pleiades! The Orion Nebula! Sagittarius A*! The Whirlpool Galaxy! And many, many others.
Still, I can't think of any single object in space without making some kind of mental calculation as to how far away it is. The idea that it could ever be relatively straightforward to send humans across light-years in space has always seemed absurd to me.
Ann
Color Commentator
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Speak of the devil... Now if I could find a Math to Ron translator that spoke in "Fiz"ese.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
I read the abstract and decided that... No.Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:Speak of the devil... Now if I could find a Math to Ron translator that spoke in "Fiz"ese.
Ann
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Well, you could skip over the formulation sections with their math, and just go to the conclusions, with easy to understand arguments likeAnn wrote:I read the abstract and decided that... No.Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:Speak of the devil... Now if I could find a Math to Ron translator that spoke in "Fiz"ese. :D
We do not expect significant mutual information between the low-energy degrees of freedom in a Wilsonian effective action and those in the ultraviolet completion.
Chris
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- geckzilla
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Does the use of infrared and ultraviolet in that paper even have anything to do with light or is it some kind of metaphor?
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
If they are used as metaphors, it would be the first time I have come across the terms infrared and ultraviolet being used that way.geckzilla wrote:Does the use of infrared and ultraviolet in that paper even have anything to do with light or is it some kind of metaphor?
Blue is quite often used as a metaphor for "shortwave" or "more shortwave than...". Red is sometimes used as a metaphor for "longwave" or "more longwave than..." Red is often used as a metaphor for "cool", as in red giant star or red dwarf star. Blue is less often used as a metaphor for "hot". Hot stars are typically called "hot stars" or O-type stars or B-type stars, or OB stars. They are less often called just "blue stars".
But to my knowledge, ultraviolet and infrared are not used as metaphors.
Ann
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
We will probably never know what a black hole looks like close up but you might be able to see one from your back yard.
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Re: What did you see on the web today?
Science on the campaign trail: Where the presidential candidates stand
Science Magazine | Science Insider | 2016 Feb 01
Science Magazine | Science Insider | 2016 Feb 01
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor