Nerull
Nerull t1_je2h14d wrote
Reply to comment by Suitable-Victory-105 in Why from Earth do we see all these stars but in images taken from space we see none? by Suitable-Victory-105
You don't actually need Earth blocking the sun for you, you just need to look away from the sun and anything lit by the sun.
Nerull t1_je2gtig wrote
Reply to Why from Earth do we see all these stars but in images taken from space we see none? by Suitable-Victory-105
If you have access to a camera with manual exposure settings, here's an experiment: Setup the exposure for a properly exposed, sun lit daytime photo.
Without touching the settings, take the camera outside at night, point it at the sky, and snap a photo. What do you think you'll capture?
The answer is: nothing. The stars are far too dim, compared to sunlight, to show up in the exposure at all. Most space photography is done in sunlight, of things that are sun lit. The cameras are set to properly exposed these sun lit things, and the lack of an atmosphere doesn't change the fact that the stars are just too dim to show up in the same exposure.
Nerull t1_jdyv679 wrote
Reply to comment by thawed_froyo in Are galaxies just giant accretion disks around super massive black holes? by darthvadercock
Our orbital eccentricity would change slightly. I'm not sure the change would be large enough to even measure.
Nerull t1_jdy9585 wrote
Reply to comment by thawed_froyo in Are galaxies just giant accretion disks around super massive black holes? by darthvadercock
For us, essentially nothing. Some stars extremely close to the galactic core might have their orbits disrupted, but we might not even notice.
Nerull t1_jdy8gyp wrote
Reply to Hypothetical question by jd-sutton
From 100ly JWST would see Earth as a single pixel dot, if it could seperate it from the sun's glare at all.
Here's a planet 25ly away from the Hubble Space Telescope:
https://www.universetoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/fomalhaut-planet.jpg
Nerull t1_jdx5z5i wrote
Reply to Are galaxies just giant accretion disks around super massive black holes? by darthvadercock
No, the black hole is an essentially insignificant portion of the galaxies entire mass. The galaxy is orbiting it's own collective mass not the black hole.
For reference, Sag A* is about 0.0007% of our galaxies mass. It's gravitational attraction on our solar system is completely insignificant compared to the rest of the galaxies mass.
Our solar system orbits the galaxy at about 230000 m/s. Sag A*'s escape velocity at our orbital radius is about 2090 m/s. If the rest of the galaxy vanished, we would go flying out into intergalactic space, since we aren't even close to being gravitationally bound to the black hole.
Nerull t1_jd646f7 wrote
Reply to comment by Majestic_Pitch_1803 in Couldn’t we land on an asteroid that is passing through our solar system and use that as a vessel for interstellar travel? by [deleted]
Not really. For interstellar asteroids you're looking at transit times between star systems measured in millions of years. Nuclear power isn't going to last that long. Frankly, neither is human technology. If people did somehow survive on an asteroid for millions of years, they wouldn't have any cultural memory left of how they got there or why and they would have evolved to be substantially different than humans on Earth - which they might find at their destination anyway, if Earth humans develop faster propulsion methods.
Nerull t1_jd63gc2 wrote
Reply to comment by Majestic_Pitch_1803 in Couldn’t we land on an asteroid that is passing through our solar system and use that as a vessel for interstellar travel? by [deleted]
Asteroids are not traveling nearly fast enough to be useful to transit from one place to another.
Realize you're talking about transit times measured in millions of years.
Even at these slow speeds, we basically get one shot to intercept it before its out of reach. There is no time to slowly launch many smaller probes to it, or build up a base on it.
Nerull t1_jd628wl wrote
Reply to comment by xzeion in Couldn’t we land on an asteroid that is passing through our solar system and use that as a vessel for interstellar travel? by [deleted]
Landing a probe on one doesn't save any fuel, because the probe has to match the trajectory of the asteroid in the first place - which means its going wherever the asteroid is going already.
Nerull t1_jd2ckmo wrote
Reply to comment by SimplyZer0 in The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
Quantum teleportation is the transmission of a quantum state from one location to another through a classical communication channel. What does that have to do with information transmission through entanglement?
Nerull t1_jd1uavq wrote
Reply to comment by SimplyZer0 in The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
The 2022 Nobel prize in physics did no such thing. It wasn't about information transfer at all. It also isn't new - Nobel prizes are awarded for important work, not new work. On average Nobel prizes are awarded about 15-20 years after a work is published, if that work proves to be important enough. This one did, but its not some breakthrough that we didn't understand until now - it was awarded for work in 80s and 90s that has been the status quo in quantum physics for decades - and that physics, including the physics the prize was awarded for - confirm that no information can be transferred through entanglement.
The most recent paper cited by the Nobel committee in their summary of the work the prize was awarded for was published in 1999.
Nerull t1_jd023qh wrote
Reply to comment by SimplyZer0 in The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
If there is anything at all important to understand about entanglement it is that it does not transfer information.
Nerull t1_jd01uau wrote
Reply to The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
Why would redshift corrupt the data? It just changes the frequency.
If you watch the carrier frequency of a satellite broadcast using a radio spectrum analyzer as it goes overhead you can watch it drift up and down. Satellite comms work just fine.
Nerull t1_jcvexxn wrote
Hallucinations have nothing to do with space-time.
Nerull t1_jbgbs3r wrote
Reply to What are some good sources I can use when finding out why the rocket fuel and exhaust particles separate during launch in the upper atmosphere causing that bright "bulb" of light? by redditslayer95
It's just pressure. Gasses expand until the pressure is equalized. As the rocket gets higher, the exhaust gasses expand more as the ambient pressure gets lower.
Nerull t1_jaea6ue wrote
Vertically launching rockets try to get out of the dense atmosphere as quickly as possible, so an air breathing engine wouldn't work for very long - Falcon 9 is above 30000 ft about 1 minute after launch, and above 50000 ft 20 seconds later. The added cost and complexity of another stage for such a short period of the flight aren't really worth it.
Nerull t1_j9nh2oj wrote
Reply to comment by Siliskk in Time dilation question by [deleted]
A planet near the black hole would experience time much slower, not faster. Being in a gravity well slows down time relative to a point far away from it.
Nerull t1_j8m03g3 wrote
Reply to comment by Atypicalicious in Once manufacturing moves almost entirely into space and the workers want drugs, gambling and prostitution and wanted criminals on Earth can escape to space, the solar system away from gravity wells will become largely lawless. Who will do the policing and how? by [deleted]
Not a single professional in that thread said that manufacturing will move entirely into space.
Nerull t1_j4iu04b wrote
Reply to Maybe you all can settle this debate. What happens when you fire (Wait for it) a gun with a recoil suppression system, such as the KRISS Vector, in vacuum? by TyphusIsDaddy
Putting it in space makes it really easy.
Put the person in a black box. We don't care what happens in the box.
A bullet flies out of the box with momentum +p, the box must gain momentum -p. There is no way around this.
Nerull t1_j1v6497 wrote
Reply to comment by This_Username_42 in do we really believe aliens can decode the golden records by Calm-Confidence8429
Voyager will be completely dead tens of thousands of years before it reaches the proximity of another star..
Nerull t1_j1q9ycf wrote
The scenarios look absolutely nothing alike once you consider any of the physics involved at all. It's one of those ideas that sounds great when you're stoned but doesn't really work.
Nerull t1_ixx81pe wrote
Reply to comment by gol4 in light from galaxies by gol4
The light from any such explosion would have arrived before they did and would be long gone by now.
You cannot travel faster than light. It is not possible for an object to travel from Andromeda to Earth faster than light does so.
Nerull t1_ixoc1vi wrote
There are tens of meteorites visible on any given night from any given location, only the most spectacular get any media coverage.
Nerull t1_ix1qm12 wrote
Black holes are too small, JWST doesn't have anywhere near the optical resolution to take a picture of one.
The Event Horizon Telescope has an effective angular resolution about 1000 times better than JWST.
Nerull t1_je2has8 wrote
Reply to comment by Suitable-Victory-105 in Why from Earth do we see all these stars but in images taken from space we see none? by Suitable-Victory-105
If they aren't looking at the sun, or anything lit by the sun, they can see stars just fine. Your surroundings just need to be dark enough to let your eyes become dark adjusted.