If it was Charon, then Charon would have been moving relatively slow to not destroy Pluto, and also be caught in its gravity well.
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
If it was Charon, then Charon would have been moving relatively slow to not destroy Pluto, and also be caught in its gravity well.
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
I'd assume that something making a crater that large would have to be moving relatively slowly. More a case of two large rocks bumping into one another (and then assuming an orbit around one another after bouncing off).
PSN,Steam,Live | CptHamiltonian
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
It's got a dent. I am extremely amused.
It's been hiding it the whole time.
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
If it was Charon, then Charon would have been moving relatively slow to not destroy Pluto, and also be caught in its gravity well.
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
The gravitational binding energy of Pluto is 5.76e27 joules; the explosive yield of the K-Pg impactor is (according to a search) about 5.43e23 joules, or a little less than 1/1000 the energy needed to fully disperse Pluto. This would cause substantial damage and probably eject material, but Pluto would not be obliterated.
Note that orbital crossing velocities are lower at Pluto's distance from the Sun, so impacts are probably slower on average. Objects at that distance still have a great deal of gravitational potential energy rather than kinetic energy.
If it was Charon, then Charon would have been moving relatively slow to not destroy Pluto, and also be caught in its gravity well.
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
The gravitational binding energy of Pluto is 5.76e27 joules; the explosive yield of the K-Pg impactor is (according to a search) about 5.43e23 joules, or a little less than 1/1000 the energy needed to fully disperse Pluto. This would cause substantial damage and probably eject material, but Pluto would not be obliterated.
Note that orbital crossing velocities are lower at Pluto's distance from the Sun, so impacts are probably slower on average. Objects at that distance still have a great deal of gravitational potential energy rather than kinetic energy.
Ummm....
There's a big difference between completely disperse and turn into a rubble cloud that would not have a dent after it reformed a million years later though.
Right?
There aren't even rings or a cloud.
Like the moon forming impact didn't leave a dent.
They moistly come out at night, moistly.
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AbsoluteZeroThe new film by Quentin KoopantinoRegistered Userregular
That'll really be something if that big-ass crater is real and not just an imaging artefact. Are there any other bodies in the solar system with such a large crater relative to the size of the object it's on? I can think only Mimas, and from the looks of it Pluto would beat it out on crater to body size ratio, just by eyeballing the image there.
That'll really be something if that big-ass crater is real and not just an imaging artefact. Are there any other bodies in the solar system with such a large crater relative to the size of the object it's on? I can think only Mimas, and from the looks of it Pluto would beat it out on crater to body size ratio, just by eyeballing the image there.
Mars. The planet's weird two tone coloring is likely the result of an impact.
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
If you want more information.
40% of a planets surface. Jeez.
The latter analysis by researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Nasa suggests that a giant basin that covers about 40 percent of the surface of Mars, sometimes called the Borealis Basin, is actually the remains of a colossal impact very early in the solar system’s formation, measuring about the size of the combined area of Asia, Europe and Australia.
Planetary scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, were involved in both computer simulation studies - which also appear in the journal Nature - and come to the same conclusion: that Mars once collided with an object about one-half to two-thirds the size of the Moon, striking at an angle of 30 to 60 degrees to leave a massive oval shaped basin.
Blammo.
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
If it was Charon, then Charon would have been moving relatively slow to not destroy Pluto, and also be caught in its gravity well.
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
The gravitational binding energy of Pluto is 5.76e27 joules; the explosive yield of the K-Pg impactor is (according to a search) about 5.43e23 joules, or a little less than 1/1000 the energy needed to fully disperse Pluto. This would cause substantial damage and probably eject material, but Pluto would not be obliterated.
Note that orbital crossing velocities are lower at Pluto's distance from the Sun, so impacts are probably slower on average. Objects at that distance still have a great deal of gravitational potential energy rather than kinetic energy.
AbsoluteZeroThe new film by Quentin KoopantinoRegistered Userregular
Stayed up last night to watch Russia's Progress 60 blast off to the ISS carrying food and supplies. Whole thing went off without a hitch. Don't really see much in the news about this stuff when it's not a catastrophe. I'm sure the ISS crew will be glad to restock some supplies. Also bodes well for the Soyuz launch later this month that will ferry 3 astronauts to the ISS returning the crew to its usual complement of 6.
Stayed up last night to watch Russia's Progress 60 blast off to the ISS carrying food and supplies. Whole thing went off without a hitch. Don't really see much in the news about this stuff when it's not a catastrophe. I'm sure the ISS crew will be glad to restock some supplies. Also bodes well for the Soyuz launch later this month that will ferry 3 astronauts to the ISS returning the crew to its usual complement of 6.
Different rockets used for manned launch. Supply runs use a cheaper more combustible fuel, nasty stuff that will give you cancer on contact.
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AbsoluteZeroThe new film by Quentin KoopantinoRegistered Userregular
More strange features coming into focus on Pluto. This is a "natural color" image. Check out the series of dark smudges on Pluto's southern hemisphere. Very uniform, and quite large. Also interesting that Charon appears much darker than Pluto.
Charon being darker is actually pretty weird. I'd have expected them to have nearly the same composition and surface conditions.
Maybe Pluto is more fractionated as a result of its larger mass, or of heating via impacts?
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
As a non-sciency type person (more of a hobby following along), is my conclusion correct in feeling like we're on the brink of some serious stuff here in a lot of fields, or is this just par for the course and I'm only noticing it now that I'm paying attention?
As a non-sciency type person (more of a hobby following along), is my conclusion correct in feeling like we're on the brink of some serious stuff here in a lot of fields, or is this just par for the course and I'm only noticing it now that I'm paying attention?
Yes to both. There are major discoveries being made in hundreds of fields, and this is generally par for the course in terms of the last century or so of human history. If you adjust for population levels, you can probably extend that observation for centuries or even millenia prior--you'd have to confirm that with a historian or twenty, though.
The big take away:
servos that can mimic human strength and finesse. 45lbs bicep curl, 20lbs index/thumb pinch. And they can be scaled up so they can be stronger.
Robots that can work in human environments. EOD, keyboards, etc.
Another blerb about neuromuscular reenervation (rewiring nerves to the pectoral muscle to pick up on nerve signals for amputees)
AbsoluteZeroThe new film by Quentin KoopantinoRegistered Userregular
Don't expect any new data from New Horizons for the next several days. As of today the probe will be at Pluto in 9 days. What awful timing for a glitch like this. Hopefully they have it all sorted out well in time. It would be heart breaking to say the least if the probe were to zip right past Pluto, unable to function.
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
Shit.
Hope its not a physical failure.
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
Update, 10pm ET: NASA has announced that "There was no hardware or software fault. The underlying cause was a hard-to-detect timing flaw in the spacecraft command sequence that occurred during an operation to prepare for flyby." Science operations are set to resume on July 7.
Oh man, I can't imagine being the guy/gal/team that missed this bug. And the relief they felt when they realised that it was fixable.
Given they've had bugs which flat out destroyed probes...yeah definitely a relief. Especially now. Losing a few days right now sucks but nothing compared to losing the flyby
Though I imagine the flyby will suffer a bit still. Less time to refine things, have to rejuggle the schedule..
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MorninglordI'm tired of being Batman,so today I'll be Owl.Registered Userregular
Not just destroyed.
Smacked it straight into the planet they were aiming for.
Whoops.
(PSN: Morninglord) (Steam: Morninglord) (WiiU: Morninglord22) I like to record and toss up a lot of random gaming videos here.
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TraceGNU Terry Pratchett; GNU Gus; GNU Carrie Fisher; GNU Adam WeRegistered Userregular
Oh man, I can't imagine being the guy/gal/team that missed this bug. And the relief they felt when they realised that it was fixable.
Given they've had bugs which flat out destroyed probes...yeah definitely a relief. Especially now. Losing a few days right now sucks but nothing compared to losing the flyby
Though I imagine the flyby will suffer a bit still. Less time to refine things, have to rejuggle the schedule..
nah
it's not like the glitch suddenly changed how fast or slow it was going, or in what direction.
Yeah I read that the glitch hadn't caused any direct propulsion issues and that no vector changes were required during the down time. I think the only thing they missed was a couple of none essential (i.e. nothing to do with the flyby plotting) data acquirements.
So what's the likelihood that there's actually life on this thing? And does Philae have the equipment necessary to defintively detect if there is life on the comet?
It's pretty unlikely, given the chances of life getting into or evolving in that particular chunk of junk in the first place, and then surviving (millions of? billions of?) years of travel through space and all the delicious radiation therein.
So what's the likelihood that there's actually life on this thing? And does Philae have the equipment necessary to defintively detect if there is life on the comet?
At first I was disappointed that a creationist of all things got me worked up about life on a comet. But that article is pretty cool so it's all good. I had no idea you could grow carbon like that.
"I see everything twice!"
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AbsoluteZeroThe new film by Quentin KoopantinoRegistered Userregular
So what's the likelihood that there's actually life on this thing? And does Philae have the equipment necessary to defintively detect if there is life on the comet?
He’s said that the flu comes from space. He’s said SARS comes from space. He’s claimed living cells found in the stratosphere come from space. (There is no evidence at all they do, and it’s far more likely they are terrestrial.) He’s said a weird red rain in India was from space (when it’s been shown conclusively that it isn’t). The list goes on and on. Wickramasinghe jumps on everything, with little or no evidence, and says it’s from outer space, so I think there's a case to be made for a bias on his part. -- Phil Plait
Posts
I think I've found the elementary "person" particle which gives a person mass
TO COLLIDER
And, antired and antiblue and antigreen.
But there's no antialpha.
Might be a processing artifact though, so we'll know more in a week or two.
So, mass relay y/n?
Its just a gut perception on my part, but with Pluto being so small, something like the asteroid in size and speed that killed the dinos would have obliterated Pluto.
Steam - NotoriusBEN | Uplay - notoriusben | Xbox,Windows Live - ThatBEN
I'd assume that something making a crater that large would have to be moving relatively slowly. More a case of two large rocks bumping into one another (and then assuming an orbit around one another after bouncing off).
It's been hiding it the whole time.
Note that orbital crossing velocities are lower at Pluto's distance from the Sun, so impacts are probably slower on average. Objects at that distance still have a great deal of gravitational potential energy rather than kinetic energy.
Ummm....
There's a big difference between completely disperse and turn into a rubble cloud that would not have a dent after it reformed a million years later though.
Right?
There aren't even rings or a cloud.
Like the moon forming impact didn't leave a dent.
Mars. The planet's weird two tone coloring is likely the result of an impact.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/3345502/Asteroid-impact-made-Mars-two-faced.html
If you want more information.
40% of a planets surface. Jeez.
Blammo.
Probably where the Mi-Go live.
i stand corrected. thanks @cycloneranger
Steam - NotoriusBEN | Uplay - notoriusben | Xbox,Windows Live - ThatBEN
Does reprocessed "Enhance" is real now?
but they're listening to every word I say
Different rockets used for manned launch. Supply runs use a cheaper more combustible fuel, nasty stuff that will give you cancer on contact.
Maybe Pluto is more fractionated as a result of its larger mass, or of heating via impacts?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKhxcOLQhKk
The big take away:
servos that can mimic human strength and finesse. 45lbs bicep curl, 20lbs index/thumb pinch. And they can be scaled up so they can be stronger.
Robots that can work in human environments. EOD, keyboards, etc.
Another blerb about neuromuscular reenervation (rewiring nerves to the pectoral muscle to pick up on nerve signals for amputees)
Steam - NotoriusBEN | Uplay - notoriusben | Xbox,Windows Live - ThatBEN
Hope its not a physical failure.
Update, 10pm ET: NASA has announced that "There was no hardware or software fault. The underlying cause was a hard-to-detect timing flaw in the spacecraft command sequence that occurred during an operation to prepare for flyby." Science operations are set to resume on July 7.
http://arstechnica.com/science/2015/07/new-horizons-enters-safe-mode-9-days-before-pluto-rendezvous/
http://steamcommunity.com/id/pablocampy
Given they've had bugs which flat out destroyed probes...yeah definitely a relief. Especially now. Losing a few days right now sucks but nothing compared to losing the flyby
Though I imagine the flyby will suffer a bit still. Less time to refine things, have to rejuggle the schedule..
Smacked it straight into the planet they were aiming for.
Whoops.
nah
it's not like the glitch suddenly changed how fast or slow it was going, or in what direction.
http://steamcommunity.com/id/pablocampy
So what's the likelihood that there's actually life on this thing? And does Philae have the equipment necessary to defintively detect if there is life on the comet?
Very slim.
I knew it was BS as soon as I saw the name Wickramasinghe. That guy is a fucking hack.
The relevant part:
He’s said that the flu comes from space. He’s said SARS comes from space. He’s claimed living cells found in the stratosphere come from space. (There is no evidence at all they do, and it’s far more likely they are terrestrial.) He’s said a weird red rain in India was from space (when it’s been shown conclusively that it isn’t). The list goes on and on. Wickramasinghe jumps on everything, with little or no evidence, and says it’s from outer space, so I think there's a case to be made for a bias on his part. -- Phil Plait
why is it that all the nutjobs are stuck in Netscape era webpages?