Brazil compared to Pluto.
thank you for come to brazil
27. Astrophysicist, writer, artist. Michigan. Business inquiries: kaijunobiz@gmail.com
Anonymous asked:
That actually happened when we first discovered the asteroid belt. At one point the solar system had like 42 planets before someone was like ‘now wait a minute’
Where are the stans for the other 33 not-planets huh? Where are the teenagers shitting their pants over asteroid 1932-1d-2006 huh? VIVA LA 1932-1D-2006 HUH??
I think a lot of people assume in their heads that Europe is further south than it is because it’s so warm there in comparison to say, Siberia or northern Canada.
Well why is Europe so warm then? I’m glad you asked. They get all the hot wind.
And you may reasonably ask, is this hot air coming from the central Atlantic or from the mouths of European politicians? Like most things it’s a combination of different… but no yeah it’s just warm air currents from down south in the tropics
This also shows why a relatively mild heat in California or Texas might cause drought and heat-stroke in places like England or Denmark, because those areas are used to Northern-Canada levels of heat
I think the thing that affected me most when moving across the ocean is the strange high light in Northern Europe. The sky is a different color, and the winters are just slightly darker and drawn-in.
Pluto, while not recognized definitively as a planet, is often referred to as a dwarf planet by some. Others think that Pluto is simply a ball of ice and dirt, or perhaps an asteroid. Regardless of its definition, Pluto has five established moons: Charon, Nix, Hydra, P4, and P5. This necklace displays Pluto and all five of its moons, hung on an 18” chain. Sold on Etsy.
New images from New Horizons of Pluto and its moons: July 15th, 2015
1. Methane map of Pluto
2. Pluto’s moon Charon
Cathy Olkin is now describing a new image of Charon, the largest of Pluto’s moons, named for the ferryman of Greek mythology who carried the dead across the river Styx.
She says that the team has been describing the dark region near the pole as Mordor, and that the dark area may be a veneer and the brighter regions craters. “Going from the north-east to the south-west is a series of troughs and cliffs,” she says. “It’s amazing ot see this image.”
“The extend about 600 miles across the planet, so this is a huge area and it could be that it’s due to internal processes.”
She says below that region is a region where “it’s relatively smooth,” suggesting “it’s geologically active or resurfacing” in that area.
Near the top – “at about the two o’clock position” she points out a canyon. “That canyon is really quite deep, it’s about four to six miles deep. I find that fascinating.”
“So it’s a small world with deep canyons, troughs, cliffs, small regions that are still quite mysterious to us.”
“There’s so much interesting science in this one small image alone.”
3. Pluto’s moon Hydra
He describes its elongated, “surprisingly large” dimensions and jokes: “Hydra’s not a planet”. It’s primarily composed of water ice, he adds, and some higher resolution images are on their way.
4. Close up of Pluto’s surface:
Another researcher says that the team is named the heart-shaped region on Pluto after the discoverer of the planet, Clyde Tombaugh.“While [the heart] was a good name, we wanted to honor the discoverer,” he says.
They zoom into one part of the yesterday’s photo of Pluto with the first very high resolution image. He says surprisingly that they have not found a single impact crater on this image.
“Probably less than 100 million years old, which is a small fraction” of the age of the solar system, he says. “These mountains we’res seeing are quite spectacular, they might be up to 11,000ft high.”
He says the surface is covered with a lot of nitrogen, ice, methane ice – “you just can’t make mountains out of that stuff, so we’re seeing the bedrock.”
Source: The Guardian
karlmarxiskool asked:
Pluto is a dwarf planet
And the rules for planethood are
1. is in orbit around the Sun,
2. has sufficient mass to assume hydrostatic equilibrium (a nearly round shape), and
3. Has “cleared the neighborhood” around its orbit.
Pluto does not meet the 3rd criteria
Anonymous asked:
Cleared orbit of debris and is the dominant thing in its orbit. Pluto and it’s moon actually orbit each other because the mass of it’s moon perturbs Pluto so much that their center of gravity is somewhere between Pluto and it’s moon
Random story of the day:
Mapmakers often put secrets in their maps as copyright traps, to make sure no one copies their maps. For example, some map makers put fake streets in maps, sometimes fake features. If they see a map that has that street, they know it was copied from them.
Similarly, in 2005, the New Oxford American Dictionary published a new word: Esquivalience, meaning “Willful avoidance of one’s official responsibilities”. It was a made up word, a copyright trap to make sure no other dictionaries copied them. If anyone copied their dictionary, the stealer wouldn’t be able to come up with a source except for the New Oxford. (Dictionary.com fell for this trap)
Another example of a copyright trap was when the author of The Trivia Encyclopedia put a false fact in his book, because he was certain that the makers of the game Trivial Pursuit were taking his facts for the game. (The false fact was that “TV detective Columbo’s first name was Phillip” when the show never specified his name. Sure enough, the ‘fact’ showed up in Trivial Pursuit.
Anonymous asked:
They’re afraid of change and have decided to make “viva la Pluto” a facet of their personality and it’s just annoying for literally any astronomer that has to interact with them
