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8 years ago
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again
The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again

The Science Has Spoken: Pluto Will Never Be A Planet Again

“What’s perhaps most remarkable is that we can make a simple, mathematical relationship between a world’s mass and its orbital distance that can be scaled and applied to any star. If you’re above these lines, you’re a planet; if you’re below it, you’re not. Note that even the most massive dwarf planets would have to be closer to the Sun than Mercury is to reach planetary status. Note by how fantastically much each of our eight planets meets these criteria… and by how much all others miss it. And note that if you replaced the Earth with the Moon, it would barely make it as a planet.”

It was a harsh lesson in astronomy for all of us in 2006, when the International Astronomical Union released their official definition of a planet. While the innermost eight planets made the cut, Pluto did not. But given the discovery of large numbers of worlds in the Kuiper belt and beyond our Solar System, it became clear that we needed something even more than what the IAU gave us. We needed a way to look at any orbiting worlds around any star and determine whether they met a set of objective criteria for reaching planetary status. Recently, Alan Stern spoke up and introduced a geophysical definition of a planet, which would admit more than 100 members in our Solar System alone. But how does this stand up to what astronomers need to know?

As it turns out, not very well. But the IAU definition needs improving, too, and modern science is more than up to the challenge. See who does and doesn’t make the cut into true planetary status, and whether Planet Nine – if real – will make it, too!


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7 years ago
Passing Out Some Nifty Drunk Science Bookmarks At #acen For @picstar120 And His YouTube Meetup!!! Http://ift.tt/2rCZ6MK

Passing out some nifty Drunk Science bookmarks at #acen for @picstar120 and his YouTube meetup!!! http://ift.tt/2rCZ6MK


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8 years ago
Hey Guys, We Made A Flyer That You Can Print Out And Post In Your Places Of Choice! Http://ift.tt/2jNXMm3

Hey guys, we made a flyer that you can print out and post in your places of choice! http://ift.tt/2jNXMm3


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8 years ago
SpaceX plans to send two people around the Moon
Two private citizens approached the company, are ‘very serious’ about the trip

SpaceX has plans to send two private citizens around the Moon, CEO Elon Musk announced today.

It will be a private mission with two paying customers, not NASA astronauts, who approached the company. The passengers are “very serious” about the trip and have already paid a “significant deposit,” according to Musk. The trip around the Moon would take approximately one week: it would skim the surface of the Moon, go further out into deep space, and loop back to Earth — approximately 300,000 to 400,000 miles.

The plan is to do the trip in the second quarter of 2018 on the Crew Dragon spacecraft with the Falcon Heavy rocket, which is due to do its maiden launch this summer. Of course, Musk is well-known for his unrealistic deadlines — in 2011, he promised to put people in space in just three years.

The two people going on the trip, who weren’t named, already know each other. They will begin initial training for the trip later this year. Musk declined to comment on the exact cost of the trip, but said it was “comparable” or a little more than the cost of a crewed mission to the International Space Station. For context, one ticket on the Russian Soyuz rocket costs NASA around $80 million.

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8 years ago

Please subscribe, like, comment, and donate! Next episode April 1, 2017. Stay tuned for Bloopers from this episode on March 25 , 2017. Starring: Candice Lola Directed by Rebecca Berger Produced by Rebecca Berger and Candice Lola Written by Candice Lola Editing, Color, Sound Design by Rebecca Berger Animation by Rachael K McDonald Links: Music: http://ift.tt/1JICaNj and http://ift.tt/2lquxdO http://ift.tt/2lINlQJ http://ift.tt/2lqtjzr http://ift.tt/2lIL08B http://ift.tt/2lqvuCQ (Donations are always welcome!) http://ift.tt/2lITyw7 http://ift.tt/2lqvQJO


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8 years ago
Statistically The Most Handsome Ever.

Statistically the most handsome ever.


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8 years ago
A Visualisation Of The Recent Rapid Change In Temperature.

A Visualisation of the Recent Rapid Change in Temperature.

(GreenPeace)


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8 years ago

This, and other precious gems, available via the link in the bio. #science #bloopers #funny #stem #blerd http://ift.tt/2oQXTmH


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8 years ago
Primitive plants survive almost two years in outer space
Searing temperatures, radiation and lack of air didn't kill algae kept outside the International Space Station – so maybe life from space could colonise worlds

Primitive plants are the latest forms of Earth life to show they can survive in the harshness of space, and for many months. Cold-loving algae from the Arctic Circle have joined the space-travelling club, alongside bacteria, lichens and even simple animals called tardigrades.

Preliminary studies of the algae after their return to Earth from the International Space Station lend some weight to the “panspermia” theory, that comets and meteorites could potentially deliver life to otherwise sterile planets. The results also provide insights into the potential for human colonies on distant planets to grow crops brought from Earth.

The algae were of the Sphaerocystis species, codenamed CCCryo 101-99, and were returned to Earth in June last year after spending 530 days on a panel outside the ISS. While space-borne, they withstood the vacuum, temperatures ranging from -20 °C at night to 47.2 °C during the day, plus perpetual ultraviolet radiation of a strength that would destroy most life on Earth if not filtered out by the atmosphere.

“I’m sure that plants of many kinds have been on the ISS before, but on the inside, not the outside,” says Thomas Leya of the Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology in Potsdam, Germany, who organised the algae experiment. “As far as I know, this is the first report of plants exposed on the surface of the space station.”

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7 years ago
Go. Get. COVERED! Enrollment Started Yesterday And Ends December 15! Don’t Forget!! Please Ignore The

Go. Get. COVERED! Enrollment started yesterday and ends December 15! Don’t forget!! Please ignore the following hashtags. They are for the sole purpose of spreading this reminder further. #funny #friends #healthylifestyle #congratulations #halloween #naturalhair #makeup #me #meme #memes http://ift.tt/2iTXazP


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drunkscience4u - Drunk Science
Drunk Science

The official page of Drunk Science! An enthusiastic host performs simple experiments and then humorously explains the science behind the result, all while visibly drunk.

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