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Pilot's Lounge Members meetup |
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#1
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What do you think? We all know this star is ready to go bang ... super Novea style.
But will it happen in our lifetime? I doubt it. A Star like Betelguese takes it good old time, and while we measure days, weeks and years, this star scoffs at us, it will go bang when its quite ready, maybe our own species will be long extinct when this great star expires. But in the grand scheme of things, its ready to explode. |
#2
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It may already have done so, but on the other hand;
http://earthsky.org/brightest-stars/...xplode-someday |
#3
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Sometime in the next million years....
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#4
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#5
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Actually I'd hate to see it go.
Orion, one of the oldest human known constellations, would be no more.
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Cheers |
#6
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It doesn't matter, raaaid will have achieved enlightenment and save us all anyway.
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Intel Q9550 @3.3ghz(OC), Asus rampage extreme MOBO, Nvidia GTX470 1.2Gb Vram, 8Gb DDR3 Ram, Win 7 64bit ultimate edition |
#7
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#8
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![]() I'm not picking on you, I know what you mean I love Astronomy and its hard to imagine the night sky without Orion. I was reading somewhere else today that we only get a Supernova in our region of our galaxy about once every 100 years or so, Betelguese even if it had went bang a while back and its light reaches us tomorrow is still far away enough for its gamma rays to not kill us, we'd just enjoy the brightness .. some say as bright as a full moon on a cloudless clear night and some say bright enough to not need street lights at night ... somewhere in the middle maybe ... but imagine that, just imagine that! Oh well, I've seen some good once in a lifetime Comets, my dad woke me up to see Man landing on the Moon when I was a kid, witnessed the Shuttle era from start to finish ... I'd hoped to have seen a Space Elevator in my lifetime (I'm still only 52) but that seems increasingly unlikely and I expect to live a normal life expectancy ... But I really feel all our experiments so far were just like testing the water, we really need to build economically viable ways to send hardware out of Earth's immediate gravity to enable a stepping stone to go further. For sure, for our species to survive we need to eventually get out of this Solar System and populate another stars planetary system and ultimately go to other Galaxy's as well. Can it be done? I doubt it ... I think our species will expire long before populating most of the solar system at best. I wonder if any species ( and I don't think we are alone in the Universe or even Multiverse ) has managed it, so far there is no proof we have been visited by ET ![]() Oh I wonder. |
#9
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I want to add something nearly OT but still maybe within the limits. I was reading about betelgeuse when I came across an article about Voyager -1 leaving the solar system. They believe it is nearing the heliosphere, I was wondering about this photo that was part of the article. It shows the heliosphere being blown-back.
What is blowing it back? The center of our galaxy? the universe? What. ![]() |
#10
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Good video about where we are headed!!
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“Violent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism and tribalism and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive toward children: organized religion ought to have a great deal on its conscience.” ― Christopher Hitchens Last edited by Oldschool61; 06-19-2012 at 05:41 PM. |
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