boundegar
boundegar t1_je9f4pl wrote
Reply to How come planets are tilted? by JimmyNotDrake
Anything that's rotating has an axis, that just means the center of rotation. Most of the planets have axes that more or less line up with the Sun - they were born that way. The exception is Uranus, which is tipped over on its side. Nobody knows why, but probably something really big crashed into it, long ago.
boundegar t1_jd81ldo wrote
Reply to Research team finds indirect evidence for existence of dark matter surrounding black holes by karmagheden
But... dark matter also doesn't interact with normal matter, so how would it create friction?
boundegar t1_jczm61f wrote
Reply to The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
However, the red shift would be extremely small. Any realistic velocity would be a tiny fraction of the speed of light.
Also, light and radio are the same stuff - just a different frequency
boundegar t1_jctynj7 wrote
Reply to comment by Earthfall10 in Containing an incredible half-million stars, this 8-billion-year-old cosmic bauble is one of the largest and brightest globular clusters ever discovered. Credits: ESA/Hubble by Davicho77
Is it? I don't know the number of stars in the average globular cluster. I guess the rest of you do. *hanging my head*
boundegar t1_jct4seo wrote
Reply to Containing an incredible half-million stars, this 8-billion-year-old cosmic bauble is one of the largest and brightest globular clusters ever discovered. Credits: ESA/Hubble by Davicho77
An incredible half-million stars? The galaxy has what, 100 billion? I guess numbers are hard.
boundegar t1_jbwn4os wrote
Sure it can, that's not even fringe science - it's well-established. Don't discount the effect of gravity; it may be weak, but it's strong enough to pull the ocean all out of shape.
Also, the moon is a great big light in the sky. Light affects behavior and sleep - but not through your ears..
boundegar t1_ja78dsp wrote
Reply to comment by Euhn in Why are Most Meteorites Found in Antarctica? by ChieftainMcLeland
Also, a rock that came in at a steep angle would probably bury itself.
boundegar t1_ja5go7m wrote
Reply to comment by AllThePrettyPenguins in Why are Most Meteorites Found in Antarctica? by ChieftainMcLeland
Also, they would have to land at a shallow angle, which leaves them closer to the surface... maybe?
boundegar t1_j9xudrm wrote
Reply to How would radiation affect attempts to colonize the Galilean moons? by Old-Entertainment-91
From what I've read, it would be pretty intense, and no way to turn it off. Add to that a travel time of several years, and the whole project seems unlikely
boundegar t1_j88kg29 wrote
Reply to I would like to know more about this. “NASA finds Strange Cosmic Bubble Around the Solar System?!” by ExoGeniVI
Remove the word "strange" and it's almost not click bait!
boundegar t1_j59n2ra wrote
Question doesn't really make sense. Verb has no subject. Who or what is "going to the very limit?"
What you might be asking is if a neutron star gradually accretes mass, will it reach a threshold and collapse into a singularity, and the answer is yes, in theory. A bunch of gravitational waves would result, and I think scientists have detected waves with the right pattern - but there's no way to directly observe this.
boundegar t1_j112jqj wrote
Reply to comment by Bipogram in How would we get about traveling through deep space? by MysteryMystery305
True, and maybe the galaxy will be settled by Tardigrades.
boundegar t1_j110tid wrote
Reply to comment by escaai in Which theory about aliens is the most likely? by [deleted]
Well that's the way it is in Traveller - but that's TTRPG, not reality. All of the "Major Races" started colonizing the stars in about the same century, so that when they find each other, both sides are strong. That makes for a better game, but there's no reason it's likely to happen.
boundegar t1_j0ygg41 wrote
Reply to comment by HollowVoices in Which theory about aliens is the most likely? by [deleted]
Another thing I haven't seen mentioned: We spent almost all of our million years in the Stone Age. What if there are a dozen species we would recognize as "intelligent" sprinkled throughout the galaxy... and they're all hunter-gatherers?
boundegar t1_iujpi81 wrote
Reply to Why we don’t see aliens by Ggoods123
Maybe we don't see aliens is because there are no aliens
boundegar t1_iuhwdnw wrote
It seems to me if there is life in the frozen ocean, being blasted into space might make it be not-alive.
boundegar t1_iuh89y4 wrote
Reply to comment by barrycarter in How many days was Mercury in its orbit on Oct 9th, 2006 by Ligerbee
Maybe it starts at 12 on the dial.
boundegar t1_iuf5qef wrote
Reply to comment by Nerull in Please explain in simple words by Tatti_luck
It will never reach us. Lonely thought.
boundegar t1_iuf4i2i wrote
Reply to If the Milky Way is located in the middle of a void, does this explain why we see no aliens? by [deleted]
It's just possible that we see no aliens because there are no aliens. Simplest explanation.
boundegar t1_iubj7o4 wrote
Reply to comment by LaunchTransient in Cornwall: Campaigners protest against first UK space launch by Zhukov-74
Million, billion, zillion, whatever.
boundegar t1_iua4awt wrote
Why is that logic so appealing? "You can spend zillions on xxx, when you could spend it on the poor."
Why not do both? The answer, of course, is rocket or no rocket, the poor get nothing.
boundegar t1_iu0tcwv wrote
Reply to Expanding space is observed in the Universe, the term "Expanding Space" seems a perfunctory label, it must be an enormous amount of energy to accelerate the Universe. What is the science behind it? by [deleted]
Well it was only recently observed, and I don't think there's anything but a name - dark energy. But a name is not an explanation - it may as well be named Bob.
boundegar t1_itrq76x wrote
Reply to comment by kato1301 in Ancient bacteria might lurk beneath Mars’ surface by geoxol
You should write that up. I'll bet the book rights would be bank.
boundegar t1_itpy4gy wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Earth's atmosphere could be turned into a giant dark-matter detector by trevor25
Stop that! We're still using our atmosphere!
boundegar t1_je9gl6m wrote
Reply to comment by Crow4u in Do planets of solar system have parallel orbits? by Durrynda
That might have meant Neptune and Uranus. One is tipped quite a lot and the other is all the way over on its side.