Lazytown Classroom

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  • chuft
    Stepher
    SPECIAL MEMBER
    MODERATOR
    Level 33 - New Superhero
    • Dec 2007
    • 4039

    #181
    It appears the physics concept of absolute rotation - does rotation exist absent other bodies to rotate relative to - is controversial and debated.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_rotation

    It can be measured by people on the surface of a rotating body like Earth - but there are other forces at work like gravity that cloud the picture.

    l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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    • chuft
      Stepher
      SPECIAL MEMBER
      MODERATOR
      Level 33 - New Superhero
      • Dec 2007
      • 4039

      #182
      Came across this while reading a thread of people complaining that computer cases now come with glass instead of acrylic.



      l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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      • boredjedi
        Master
        SPECIAL MEMBER
        MODERATOR
        Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
        • Jun 2007
        • 7731

        #183
        Astronomy.

        A new ground based telescope finally went online yesterday. The Vera Rubin Telescope




        Edit: Also forgot about this


        Astronomers capture the most intricate picture of a galaxy in a thousand colors ever seen

        Click image for larger version  Name:	DetailedGalaxy.jpg Views:	3 Size:	639,3 KB ID:	208097

        Link to full size image: https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/zo...puUz8aJvN8.jpg

        https://www.space.com/astronomy/astr...en-photo-video
        http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

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        • boredjedi
          Master
          SPECIAL MEMBER
          MODERATOR
          Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
          • Jun 2007
          • 7731

          #184



          From a year ago.

          Longest time-lapse footage of an exoplanet to date assembled from real data

          Constructed from real data, the footage shows Beta Pictoris b—a planet 12 times the mass of Jupiter—sailing around its star in a tilted orbit. The time-lapse video condenses 17 years of footage (collected between 2003 and 2020) into 10 seconds. Within those seconds, viewers can watch the planet make about 75% of one full orbit.

          "We need another six years of data before we can see one whole orbit," said Northwestern astrophysicist Jason Wang, who led the work. "We're almost there. Patience is key."

          https://phys.org/news/2023-08-longes...anet-date.html
          http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

          Note


          • LazyPooky
            LazyPooky commented
            Editing a comment
            I believe it without seeing it. Planets orbit around stars.

          • chuft
            chuft commented
            Editing a comment
            Yes, but first you have to figure out that those little anomalies you see once every 8 months is actually an orbiting planet not just random noise.
        • chuft
          Stepher
          SPECIAL MEMBER
          MODERATOR
          Level 33 - New Superhero
          • Dec 2007
          • 4039

          #185
          I am slowly working my way through this video on breaks at work, so I can't comment on the last hour, but the first hour gives an excellent education on the scams and schemes and nonsense known as crypto and NFTs.



          l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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