rosen380
rosen380 t1_jc6a31l wrote
Reply to comment by OneBar1905 in 21 year old Nicaraguan pitcher Duque Hebbert signed by Detroit Tigers immediately after game in which he struck out a trio of MLB stars. by carnifex2005
Fwiw- career SO rates for each: Soto 16.8% Rodriguez 25.9% Devers 21.0%
From that, we'd expect an average pitcher to strike all three of them out about 0.9% of the time, or about a 1-in-109 chance
rosen380 t1_jbt3mbr wrote
Reply to comment by _zerokarma_ in Space Force allocates three historic Cape Canaveral launch pads to four companies by Azurebluenomad
The Mongooses. That's a cool team name, The Fighting Mongooses.
rosen380 t1_jbjvh2w wrote
Reply to comment by shastaxc in Meet The World's Cleanest Fully Electric Car That Removes Carbon Dioxide From The Air by Anderson069
144 **MINUTES**, not **HOURS**. And to save you the math, that is out of 525,000 minutes per year. literally measured in hundredths of a percent.
The environmental impact of switching from an ICE to an EV is literally hundreds to thousands of times greater than the impact of having versus not having this carbon sequestration device.
It takes 100 similar improvements just to get to rounding error!
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What's next? A nickel per hour increase to minimum wage to help the poor?
rosen380 t1_jbjlirs wrote
Reply to comment by shastaxc in Meet The World's Cleanest Fully Electric Car That Removes Carbon Dioxide From The Air by Anderson069
But that was the point I was making -- EVEN IF you could get these installed in every vehicle IMMEDIATELY (which we can't) and EVEN IF there was virtually no CO2 emissions related to building them and installing them and taking care of used filters (and there would be some), they'd have almost literally no impact.
It would be equivalent to enacting some sort of legislation that would reduce the average annual driving for Americans from 13,476 miles to 13,472 miles.
Sure, it is better if people drive even 4 miles less than they do now and every little bit helps, but in this instance we are talking about an absurdly tiny little bit.
rosen380 t1_jbjervo wrote
Reply to comment by shastaxc in Meet The World's Cleanest Fully Electric Car That Removes Carbon Dioxide From The Air by Anderson069
Why stop there... lets put one on every vehicle in the US.
The average American driver drives 13,476 miles per year[1]. Times ~240 licensed drivers is 3.2T miles driven.
At 4.5 pounds of CO2 per 20,000 miles, that is 728M pounds of CO2 per year.
At 48 pounds per mature tree, that is like 15M trees.
Just for comparison, adding 15M trees, would add 0.0066% to the total number of trees in the US.
Or another way to look at it; 728M pounds of CO2 is what you get from burning 36.4M gallons of gasoline. For reference, in the US we burn about that much gasoline every 144 minutes on average.
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Even before you consider actually producing these devices, installing them and handling the used filters, they are rounding error on rounding error.
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rosen380 t1_jbjcayp wrote
Reply to comment by shastaxc in Meet The World's Cleanest Fully Electric Car That Removes Carbon Dioxide From The Air by Anderson069
You are right-- I missed the "ten" in front :(
Though it is still an exaggeration since (1) 4.5 pounds is (a little) less than a tenth of 48 pounds, and (2) 20,000 miles per year is certainly not a typically driven car; that is likely 95th-98th percentile.
In the US 12-15k is more typical and I'd guess the sort of folks who really care about the environment tend toward the lower end of that (choosing not to drive when not needed and combining trips).
Looks like ~14-18 equally one tree is closer to reality, and that is before comparing the CO2 output to build the system into the car and dealing with the used filters to I guess what the CO2 costs are to get a tree planted (in a way that it'll at least survive to maturity)
rosen380 t1_jbixx7y wrote
Reply to Meet The World's Cleanest Fully Electric Car That Removes Carbon Dioxide From The Air by Anderson069
That says a mature tree will absorb 48 pounds of co2 per year. CO2 is 20% carbon by weight, so that is 9.6 pounds.
If the car is capturing 4.5 pounds of carbon per 20k miles, then sounds like it is really more like 25-35% of what a tree does for normal driving distances
[Edit] Well, not even since the article says 4.5 pounds of co2, not carbon. In that case, it is more like 5-7%!
rosen380 t1_ja82gcz wrote
Reply to comment by nixiebunny in ELI5: why do grocery stores in the US keep such a large inventory? Aside from being prepared for episodic panic buying like toilet paper or bottled water, is there an economic reason to do this? How much of the food ends up going bad? by DrEverythingBAlright
That's funny... I always thought that until today the following popped up in my YouTube feed:
rosen380 t1_j8wc9kn wrote
Reply to comment by Dweebil in A letter I wrote to my middle school principal after I farted in the middle of his speech by supermac23
Reading it made me laugh too!
rosen380 t1_j71f6ou wrote
Reply to comment by Phelahy in U.S. tracking suspected Chinese spy balloon but won't shoot it down by Nofux2giv
In one of, if not the, lowest population density states. I'm confident there is someone who can figure out how to get it down while keeping injury risks at or very near 0%
rosen380 t1_j6pj42k wrote
Reply to What is the best way to quit smoking? by SamiR83
Go to the place James Woods did in the movie Cats Eye...
rosen380 t1_j6ia5au wrote
My cousin was caught peeing in the pool at camp-- they called my aunt in to discuss it and she was like, "hey, lot's of kids pee in the pool, it isn't a big deal!"
The camp director said, "Sure, I understand that, but most of them don't do it from the diving board."
rosen380 t1_j56xlnc wrote
Reply to comment by Jorgen_Pakieto in Will Pluto ever be a planet? by twurbster
That isn't part of the reason it was "downgraded" to dwarf planet though... per the IAU these are the requirements:
- It is in orbit around the Sun.
- It has sufficient mass to assume hydrostatic equilibrium (a nearly round shape).
- It has “cleared the neighborhood” around its orbit.
Pluto meets the first two, just not the third.
rosen380 t1_j56wxso wrote
Reply to Will Pluto ever be a planet? by twurbster
...as soon as it "clears it's neighboring region of other objects". :)
rosen380 t1_j4nyjj7 wrote
I wonder how many tickets have been bought by folks from that town, all-time, that didnt win a jackpot...
rosen380 t1_iuhebwo wrote
Reply to comment by CyclopsRock in ELI5: How exactly do we get some much power from engine now, than we did 40, 50, 60 years ago? by Micromashington
I dont know about many cars, but in 1990 they ran a mostly stock Corvette ZR1 for 24 hours averaging >170MPH, setting some auto endurance records. And the car was so worn out at that point, that they continued on for almost 5 more hours
rosen380 t1_jeco5b3 wrote
Reply to comment by jezra in Nike to end sales of kangaroo-based sneakers by Sandstorm400
I think I read that demand for cow leather had declined to the degree that perfectly good hides were being dumped in landfills