icrushallevil
icrushallevil t1_jd84ct8 wrote
Reply to comment by Ser_Optimus in A New Mission Will Search for Habitable Planets at Alpha Centauri by Aeromarine_eng
Sure sure. But it's not a binary answer. It's more like the more ionizing radiation and the harder the ionizing radiation, the lower the probability of life for the simple fact that molecule bonds get torn open.
icrushallevil t1_jd7fo04 wrote
Wouldn't the X-rays from Beta Centauri and Proxima Centauri kill life on any planet? Especially proxima seems to be a very active X-ray emitter
icrushallevil t1_jcczkkm wrote
Reply to Scientists find a way to suck up carbon pollution, turn it into baking soda and store it in the oceans by tottocotunio
Sodium bicarbonate? So, it's actually making the ocean less acidic? Not bad
icrushallevil t1_jc9kn8c wrote
But if it actually were so, wouldn't it automatically mean it's fully in line with physics and we simply don't know enough about physics to understand it?
icrushallevil t1_jadb47i wrote
This would make for the perfect sensor to indicate the vector of a magnetic field. A new, modern way of compass.
icrushallevil t1_j949p0u wrote
Reply to Deep sea mining disrupt whale songs by tandemuis365
Didn't Star Trek show us what happens when we disturb the whales?
icrushallevil t1_j8jsmnj wrote
Reply to comment by YuanBaoTW in Made in China. Beijing will invest in its own AI chats by MINE_exchange
Someone call the burn ward!
icrushallevil t1_jdv3xs3 wrote
Reply to Black holes may be swallowing invisible matter that slows the movement of stars by trevor25
How does dark matter even work? How are photons able to pass through a lump of dark matter. And if dark matter exists, does it form invisible dark matter stars? And if so, what do they radiate if it's not photons? Dark photons? Questions after questions