HeebieMcJeeberson
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jdx0byy wrote
Reply to comment by ventus1b in If earth was a smooth sphere, which direction would water flow when placed on the surface? by Axial-Precession
For one thing, perfect smoothness doesn't eliminate friction - there's also electrostatic attraction between molecules. Eventually the planet rotating under the water would coax it to move.
But moreover, the atmosphere would be screaming by overhead since it does rotate with the Earth. The atmosphere is chaotic, with zones of different pressures which press down on bodies of water unevenly, creating irregularities that the sideways wind can act on to create waves. This is how wind stirs up waves on calm, smooth lakes and such.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jdnt69n wrote
Reply to comment by IronSmithFE in If earth was a smooth sphere, which direction would water flow when placed on the surface? by Axial-Precession
If the Earth weren't spinning then the water would spread out in all directions, stopping when the surface tension stopped it from getting any thinner. It would be a thin puddle beaded up on the surface. That is, unless the amount of water was enough to cover the whole planet - in that case it would cover the planet to an even depth.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jdlgk5n wrote
Reply to comment by JesseLaces in If earth was a smooth sphere, which direction would water flow when placed on the surface? by Axial-Precession
The rotation will try to fling the water away from the Earth's axis, and the farthest place from the axis is the equator. No matter where you place the water, it will flow toward the equator since there's no terrain to stop it. In the real world, where ocean water is free to flow around, sea level at the equator is actually a little higher than near the poles for this reason.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jdl116l wrote
Reply to If earth was a smooth sphere, which direction would water flow when placed on the surface? by Axial-Precession
On a smooth dry sphere it would flow toward the equator.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jcnwmz3 wrote
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jaf2eit wrote
There are a ton of variables but yes it's possible.
A red dwarf's luminosity is between a tenth and a ten-thousandth of our sun's, so even the brightest ones are dim. But sunlight hitting the planet Mercury is about 7x as bright as on Earth, and we've already observed exoplanets that are closer to their suns than Mercury is to ours. So a planet close to a red dwarf could theoretically get as much daylight as we do.
Also, lots of plant life exists in very low light conditions on Earth - and not just mushrooms etc. growing in caves. Plants under rainforest cover get as little as 2% of full sunlight. That's very much in the range of what plants out in the open could get on a world orbiting a red dwarf.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j9izuve wrote
Reply to comment by maso3K in This dad and his pet duck in 1994 by smazetron
Duquette & Tubbs
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j9izru8 wrote
Reply to This dad and his pet duck in 1994 by smazetron
Chandler and Joey have entered the chat.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j6m53s9 wrote
Reply to comment by trimeta in Perseverance Mars rover drops 10th sample, completing depot by IslandChillin
The retriever won't have to trace any of Perseverance's journey, it will go directly to Perseverance and transfer the samples, or if there's a problem with that it will go directly to the depot as a backup.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j6ad7m2 wrote
Reply to Why don’t we just make antimatter? by [deleted]
Why don't we just make a warp drive? Or a good tasting Pot-o'-Noodles?
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j5qw2is wrote
I've read that if the cosmos is infinite this could include it being infinite in the time dimension, meaning there's no starting point. This is a weird concept that challenges my thinking about what time means.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j4z3wdp wrote
Reply to If you could hear sound in space, would the earth as a whole give off a sound? by [deleted]
Probably the sound of millions of cows farting.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j4f05cr wrote
Wait til you see the new strap-on toilet attachment!
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3t3j4m wrote
Reply to comment by ScumbagMacbeth in Tired of being a doormat, set boundaries with Karen (parking) by dehydratedsilica
Okay.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3t3763 wrote
Reply to comment by ScumbagMacbeth in Tired of being a doormat, set boundaries with Karen (parking) by dehydratedsilica
See the previous comment: "you'd just save yourself a lot of trouble at this point by changing your name." To me that's as dismissive and disrespectful as telling a trans person to change their gender preference.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3edzvq wrote
Reply to comment by Pinball_Tilt in Tired of being a doormat, set boundaries with Karen (parking) by dehydratedsilica
Yeah you're clearly a better person than I am. Congrats.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3edwkz wrote
Reply to comment by 9wizz9 in Tired of being a doormat, set boundaries with Karen (parking) by dehydratedsilica
You sound like what people mean when they call someone a Karen.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3edtkb wrote
Reply to comment by HappyArtichoke7729 in Tired of being a doormat, set boundaries with Karen (parking) by dehydratedsilica
It doesn't have to be what it is. Trans people could just change their gender preference, right?
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j3e2a5g wrote
Is her name Karen? Then don't call her Karen. My perfectly nice wife's name is Karen, she's not obnoxious and never asks to see the manager, and I'm really sick of this shit.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j2ftpvm wrote
Reply to comment by ArceusTheLegendary50 in What if we kept pursuing nuclear spacecraft propulsion? by rosTopicEchoChamber
The Kurzgesagt video is well produced but surprisingly misleading. The drawbacks it brings up are all based on launching all of our nuclear waste into space, using present-day rockets with today's reliability levels, dedicated entirely to this one purpose, and each carrying the largest possible payload of waste. Most puzzlingly, it dismisses hitting the sun as difficult - as if it's any harder than hitting the moon, Mars, an asteroid, or any other space object we've been hitting consistently for decades. "What goes around comes around" is literally a terrible oversimplification that ignores reality.
The impracticalities the video discusses simply aren't relevant to adding a modest amount of waste to rocket exhaust as I described. But yes I agree that the strawman concept of launching nuclear waste into space on the scale described in the video would be a terrible idea.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j2bn9jh wrote
No idea. Asking from experience?
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j2amklb wrote
That was a different time with different standards.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j285knf wrote
Reply to Before all the Great Gatsby themed parties of the 2010's, In the 90's we used to love a good "How to host a murder" party to dress up Vintage 20's and 30's style by missjowashere
In the 80s we had "let's all dance and drink a lot and act stupid" parties.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_j284wpa wrote
Reply to If you could observe an object in space while traveling towards it from earth at light speed, would the object appear to be in “fast forward”? by fatandlean
Lightspeed is impossible to achieve, but at a significant fraction of lightspeed the object would look longer to you.
HeebieMcJeeberson t1_jdx1mxl wrote
Reply to comment by ferrel_hadley in If earth was a smooth sphere, which direction would water flow when placed on the surface? by Axial-Precession
Mom: "How do you like your new shirt?"
ferrel_hadley: "For a start it's not new if I'm already wearing it."
Mom: "Go to your room."