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JoeSchmuckatelli
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Everything posted by JoeSchmuckatelli
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How dark is intergalactic space?
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
I still think the people saying you can't see anything are incorrect. Dark sky viewing places on earth (if you traveled around to the appropriate N and S Hemisphere locations) allow folks to see 51 different galaxies. Not necessarily with great detail - but you can see them. Given that, I'm saying that the human eye could resolve the visible light in interstellar space, generally. Maybe - just maybe - there is a void like the Great Repeller where you can't see much - but I doubt it. -
What do you expect from the Science Update?
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to GGG-GoodGuyGreg's topic in KSP2 Discussion
I had a hope, way back when, that Science would be interesting. That part of the game would incorporate the data discovered by the player into an ever expanding trove of knowledge about the various CBs of the Kerbolar System. It seems, however, than just making a better, modern version of KSP - they want to do something new and interesting with Colonies and resource management - so I'm going to have to hold judgment on the direction of the game until I see what they have in store for us then. (Meaning, I don't have high expectations for Science - given that it's not their focus-feature - but I'd like to see Colonies be a whack at the fence) -
I appreciate you posting - because I'd never heard of "Eyes" before, either.
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My thought exactly. How... did... we... miss... THAT?!?
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
New to me, too. I'm guessing the main benefits are fuel efficiency in certain RPM ranges (Marine) and noise mitigation, drones. But, apparently they do fly -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
This is probably an @mikegarrisonquestion: I've been reading about toroidal propellers being used in drones and marine applications. Trying to see if there were any advances in applying these to aircraft (traditional planes, not merely drones) - and I'm not finding much. Is this because of an inability to change pitch of the propeller effectively with the toroidal shape, or are they simply too new? -
How dark is intergalactic space?
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
https://www.npr.org/2020/11/18/936219170/scientists-discover-outer-space-isnt-pitch-black-after-all -
How dark is intergalactic space?
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
That does not seem correct. You might not see it as a galaxy shape but light does travel through the intergalactic voids - so they probably look like stars. (just spitballing here - but even if a galaxy were far enough away that it's apparent diameter was tiny you should see it. Only way I can see not perceiving it would be if the redshift had taken it down below human visible spectra) -
How dark is intergalactic space?
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
We can see other galaxies from Earth. They used to call them nebula https://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/questions/question15.html https://www.pbs.org/seeinginthedark/astronomy-topics/andromeda-galaxy.html -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Had I made the observation before Webb, I'd be forced to agree... But some of what I read (acknowledged: conflicting studies and articles) suggests that I may not be. The early universe is apparently stranger than expected -
The Analysis of Sea Levels.
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to mikegarrison's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Ocean surface heat is at record-breaking levels. Temperatures began climbing in mid-March and skyrocketed over the course of several weeks, leaving scientists scrambling to figure out exactly why. Temperatures have fallen since their peak in April – as they naturally do in the spring – but they are still higher than they have ever been on record for this time of year. ... One major driver of the heat is believed to be an approaching – and potentially strong – El Niño, a natural climate fluctuation associated with warming in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, which has a global heating effect. The world has just emerged from a 3-year La Niña, El Niño’s cooler counterpart, which has helped mask the full impact of global warming. Since La Niña ended in March, ocean temperatures seem to be on a rebound, scientists say. “It’s a little bit like we’ve had the freezer door open for a while and it’s helped to cool the planet,” Johnson said. But even while that freezer has been open, background temperatures have continued to rise. Now the freezer is closed, everything is hotter than before. Ocean temperatures are off the charts right now, and scientists are alarmed | CNN -
The James Webb Space Telescope and stuff
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Streetwind's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Interestingly, there are TWO 'crisis' at the moment. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.wired.com/story/is-cosmology-broken-atacama-telescope/amp- 869 replies
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- james webb space telescope
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Google 'age of the universe' and you get about '13 billion years old' Webb has spotted galaxies 13 billion light years away. Expansionists see expansion in every direction they look. Also, Galaxies as far as we have eyes to see. 13 billion light year away galaxies. Our star alone is estimated to be 4 billion years old. ... So, why are the estimates persistent about 13 billion years? If a fully formed galaxy is 13 billion years away - isn't it absurd to think that all of its stars are brand new? (Shouldn't we at least estimate the age to be some average of Star lifespan - perhaps granting a guesstimate of 17 billion years?) Why not guess we are in a bubble of time - only able to resolve stars 13 billion years away in all directions - and that the universe may be wider and older than we can see? (Why presume 13 billion years of visible redshift = age of everything?) -
totm nov 2023 SpaceX Discussion Thread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Skylon's topic in Science & Spaceflight
I suspect the jury is still out on that. We ran a lot of scenarios up thread - and it's cargo capacity, while impressive for space, is kind of negligible for military operations. IIRC, it could carry the equivalent of three 40' shipping containers to a safe rear area. -
The James Webb Space Telescope and stuff
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Streetwind's topic in Science & Spaceflight
At work so I can't watch it. Was the talk about problems with physics or the Crisis in Cosmology (Webb is seeing complex structures at a presumed age where many expected immature systems)? I've seen nothing credible that Webb is challenging physics, but several recent papers claiming our understanding of the early universe needs work.- 869 replies
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Grin!
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What have you been playing recently? (Other than KSP)
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to a topic in The Lounge
I'm back to Satisfactory. Total restart. Reminded me why progression systems are important in games. Arrived (again) at tiers 5&6. Time for the ritual upgrade and total rework of my entire factory plan. Dawned on me unexpectedly that I was enjoying myself. Compared to having everything already unlocked and just playing Legos... I've got a scratch paper on the side and my old spreadsheets up and running trying to figure it all out again. -
KSP1 Computer Building/Buying Megathread
JoeSchmuckatelli replied to Leonov's topic in KSP1 Discussion
@Nuke- did you ever solve your heat problem?