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00:43
@Tildal You got called out in an edit suggestion :) space.stackexchange.com/review/suggested-edits/1163
 
2 hours later…
02:33
can anyone tell me name of best java book please ?
@Realz thanks a lot...:-):-):-):-):-)
 
2 hours later…
 
3 hours later…
08:30
@Undo OMG the end of the world!
Anyway, good morning! :D
 
6 hours later…
14:25
Just how hard is S1 accelerating? Anybody?
trots off to feed the puppies
@Everyone S1?
Lotus Elise?
Audi?
15:38
I awaken.
@Undo not a problem, just press ctrl-z :P
You'd think that people would get tired of the ctrl-z thing eventually...
maybe we need someone nicked Redo and a $\underline{\rm Y}$
15:59
@TildalWave Nevski, I mean (+:
trots off to sup
16:49
Anybody awake?
I is!
@Everyone Correction, Everyone is awake.
'o @Undo @DavidFreitag
'o
16:51
Got a hypothetical question I'd like to run past here first
posted on November 27, 2013

In the early hours of Nov. 27, 2013, Comet ISON entered the field of view of the European Space Agency/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. In this picture, called a coronagraph, the bright light of the sun itself is blocked so the structures around it are visible. The comet is seen in the lower right; a giant cloud of solar material, called a coronal mass ejection or CME, is seen billowing

Assuming we're able to get up to relativistic distances ... where would the craft aim it's antenna? Would the antenna be aimed in a straight-line?
behind it ?
lol
Dunno. That's why I asked (+:
@Everyone ISON?
16:58
@TildalWave Yep
@Everyone dunno looks rather weak
@TildalWave It's gone up from < 100K kmph yesterday to over double that figure today
and expected to increase more than 3 times that in the next 24
@Everyone Ah you mean what's its expected speed during perihelion? There should be plenty of quotes for that figure online
I don't think it's accelerating tho, at least not by its own will :P
Nope. I'm looking for acceleration aka increase in velocity due to Sol's gravity
Google for "NASA ISON stereo" there's trajectory calculator there for it
17:03
cometison2013 says 845000mph .... and some other websites have put a figure as high as 1.6M Kph
that would be like 1M mph
gah too much noise :(
eyes @RealzSlaw auspiciously
this one actually ... it's in Java tho secchi.nrl.navy.mil/STEREOorbit/C2012_S1_ISON.html
What're you doing with your nose?
17:05
lol
fixed :D
j/k (+: no offence
now I am totally offended
@RealzSlaw speak more quietly then :P
type more quietly, you mean
well that
17:07
you guys are too talkative :P
I have no idea what we're talking about actually
it's quieter when one types with one's nose. Fingering the keyboard is actually a very noisy affair.
so what's new?
Just wondering about these carbon credit thingies ((+:
How many carbon credits can nations earn by sending Solar Powered spacecraft into space? ((+:
Btw, how long does that applet take to load?
racket
17:11
@RealzSlaw What've you gotten yourself into this time?
@Everyone Sell those carbon credits now they'll be worthless once I answer one question here, I'll explain why we're saving the planet with our carbon emissions and we should perhaps even increase them ;)
lol
@Everyone I meant carbon credits are a racket
@RealzSlaw Actually, they are a racket
looks back
thats what I just said!
lol
Not far unlike those multi-level-marketing schemes that used to go
Of course, just because we're both in agreement doesn't mean we may not be wrong
17:16
right, you could be wrong and I could be right :P
zigzactly
You know when I studied literature to answer one @PearsonArtPhoto's question about how well Martian atmosphere stops radiation, I realized we need not worry about the geomagnetic reversal at all, the results have incredible consequences... turns out the atmosphere is pretty good at lowering GCR and SPE on its own... and the more we pollute, the more we heat it up... and more water vapour in the atmosphere stops it even better.
et tu Brute?
and during magnetic low, we'd lose some of the upper layers of the atmosphere, blowing the excess carbon emissions away from us ... so we in a sense need more of it
especially, since we now started appreciating that the geomagnetic reversal is a slow process
Slow process? Isn't the jury still out on that one?
17:20
@Everyone I just think we humans take too much credit for how fast the world is turning to hell
@Everyone not really, there's records of past magnetic reversals in layered sedimentary rock all around the world and they all point to slow reversal
@Tilda There used to be this program on BBC back around 2005/2006 I think "The great global warming swindle"
@Everyone IIRC that's about the pole glaciers melting, stopping the Atlantic stream and bringing about new ice age, no?
Not quite that, but close
Wouldn't a polarity reversal generate a current in mineral seams/veins?
ice age sounds cool
Well I think we take too much credit for recent history increase in greenhouse gases really ... I mean, has anyone even calculated emissions from natural causes like volcanoes and such? And they now found out that there's an active volcano under Antarctica even
So yeah... let's tax us more for the fact that Antarctica is melting faster. That will sure solve it. ::D
17:24
Yeh. I heard of that one. It's supposed to be a huge one too
indeed
Reminds me ... didn't they have a huge part of Baffin Bay calve from the main continent earlier this week?
and they estimate it's been active for quite awhile now, we're talking about decades here, perhaps longer
longer than decades I read
I read up to 100 years by some estimates
So yeah,... us puny humans really count :D
17:28
sigh Alright. I admit it. I set that volcano off - but it was an accident.
@Everyone I read about a big chunk of ice separating off Antarctica recently... I'll find it, give me 2 sec
That's the one
> Pine Island Glacier, Antarctica
An iceberg estimated to be 35 by 20 kilometers (22 by 12 miles) separated from Antarctica's Pine Island Glacier between November 9 and 11, 2013. Such events happen about every five or six years but this iceberg, designated "B-31," is about 50 percent larger than its predecessors in this area. A team of scientists from Sheffield and Southampton universities will track the 700 square-kilometer chunk of ice and try to predict its path using satellite data.
Heh. 35/20km would be one iceberg nobody could miss
did the last one that coasted towards Australia even melt yet?
17:32
That one got carried into the Atlantic, iirc
I heard they had some plans to exploit it for tourism, build a temporary ski resort on it or something like that LOL
Pull that puppy ashore and create a nice fresh water lake.
that's an idea
glares @Donald What?! No. Test the Europa landers on it
17:33
Where is anti-grav technology when you really need it.
'o @C2V
whats the point of using the @ if you not gonna do the nick
gosh can't get no work done when in this channel
@Everyone Hi!
@Everyone In Europe, they'll just tax us more for it, even if it's got nothing to do with us. Rhetorics don't come cheap here
you guys need to learn how to idle more :P
17:34
Just dropping in and checking out the chatter.
they chattering like birds :P
Europa. Not EuropE
Birds don't chatter.
Birds Twitter
Monkeys chatter.
@Everyone I know ... but I can't miss an opportunity to rant now, can I?
ah. sorry.
@Tilda You do know the solution to taxes now, don't you?
you're saying we twitter like monkeys?
17:36
me?
@RealzSlaw said it. Not I!
@Everyone rofl
do flying fish school or flock?
@Everyone to die?
@TildalWave flool ofc :P
blah. Why do I always find myself surrounded by nut-cases? q+:
@RealzSlaw or schlock
17:38
j/k (+:
@Everyone I asked myself the very same thing :P
@called2voyage One from the physics forum I posted awhile ago. Wouldn't a polarity reversal generate a current in mineral seams/veins?
@RealzSlaw Luck of the draw?
Btw, do comets spin on their axis?
aye
ISON is a slow spinner tho
gosh are there stats on how much text runs through this chat
its like 5 msgs/minute
17:41
Wonder how ISON got pelted out of Kuiper/Oort in the first place
Alright people. Time to shut-up (+; give @RealzSlaw time to focus on what the pretty teacher at school is trying to teach him
wheey I'm the chattiest man
lol, I am actually programming
or trying
You're very trying q+:
17:44
lol
I am being productive! really!
Don't say that twice.
If you do, you'll likely be re-productive!
If at work though, you really ought not keep the chat window open - these things can be distracting
@TildalWave lol is that real
17:48
@TildalWave Heh
@Everyone I am not at work, but anyway, I usually keep chat windows open without issue; most ppl don't talk this much :P
@RealzSlaw No idea, but it's hysterical
@TildalWave I've heard it before, as a joke
@RealzSlaw If real, it is not only hysterical but also historical
17:50
OK. How does this sound?
_"Your migration software will not let me drink coffee" quoth A. His bitterness, stronger than chicoried coffee, carried plainly over the telephone lines. Bad enough that he should have to forgo coffee - to add insult to injury it was his favoured application that had developed such temperament. It was clear a fix was in urgent demand._
I'm writing me memoirs
You're writing it "noir"?
noir?
you know, film noir
I don't get it. Explain please?
e.g. Dick Tracy
17:59
Huh?
or from newer ones The Man Who Wasn't There
googles
or Dark City had a bit of the noir-ish feel to it
Have you read The Maltese Falcon?
Nope. It's on my 'to watch' list though.
Hitchcock, wasn't it?
@Everyone No, the book is by Hammett and the movie ... dunno who directed it wait give me a sec
Director: John Huston
18:02
directed by Hitchcock, iirc
hmmm
w/ Humphrey Bogart
Another falcon then.
oh right. that was north by north-west
sorry
well the surrealism in it is about there with film noir but I wouldn't really put it in that category
18:04
my anecdote is surrealistic?
have you watched Nocturne Indien?
Nope )+: Sowwy
it's ... something different
French language movie then?
and English, and some Hindi I believe, it's been a while since I last watched it
You'll need subtitles either way, there might be some exotic languages in it too
btw, re ISON, NASA made a "toolkit" page on it: solarsystem.nasa.gov/smallworlds/cometison.cfm
I get about 844k MPH relative to Sun in NASA Eyes
max perihelion velocity
that's 377.3 km/s
or 0.126% c
18:24
wait
what is going 0.1% c
the comment?
that is fast, woah
yup pretty fast
heh, a minitime machine
just hop a ride on the comet, and you will age slower :P
@Donald.McLean hehe I've seen that exact page too ... I know it's not real, still, doesn't make it any less funny :)
how does something so fast stay in orbit
18:27
@RealzSlaw It's not that fast throughout it's orbit; this is only at perihelion
Be great if there were some way to preserve that 0.126c heading out of the well
@TildalWave Yes, it's still funny. The Snopes page, with the history of the joke is almost funnier though.
@Everyone it is still amazing it reaches that speed, and it isn't enough to break away from the sun
does that reflect on how much energy is needed to get out of the solar system?
@RealzSlaw You need to do 617.5 km/s on the surface of the Sun to reach escape velocity ... but since it's going roughly one diameter close to it, I guess it should still be pretty close to reaching it. So it has eccentricity of some 0.9999947 and orbital period at around 400k years
@TildalWave Who has an eccentricity of 0.9999947?
@Donald.McLean that's because you're an American and you read that Canadians vs Americans version :P
18:32
rofl
@Everyone Comet @Everyone
@TildalWave lol I was thinking, the US Navy forswears it, but maybe thats because it happened to the Brits
@TildalWave S1, you mean?
@Everyone S1 is just "First in September" but yeah I meant "Comet ISON"
Where'd that 0.999947 come from? That isn't hyperbolic
18:34
C/2012 S1, also known as Comet ISON or Comet Nevski–Novichonok, is a sungrazing comet discovered on 21 September 2012 by Vitali Nevski (Виталий Невский, Vitebsk, Belarus) and Artyom Novichonok (Артём Новичонок, Kondopoga, Russia). The discovery was made using the reflector of the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON) near Kislovodsk, Russia. Data processing was carried out by automated asteroid-discovery program CoLiTec. Precovery images by the Mount Lemmon Survey from 28 December 2011 and by Pan-STARRS from 28 January 2012 were quickly located. Follow-up observations were mad...
It's fairly updated, I've seen lately some Wiki pages that were nearly newsworthy with updates within minutes
Ah. It's > 1.0 @ 2050
posted on November 27, 2013 by Josh Fuchs

In today's paper, the authors study how the periods of two black hole x-ray binaries are changing. They find that the periods are decaying faster than expected based on standard theoretical arguments.

@Everyone that's just looking at it as a two-body problem in keplerian orbits... there's more to the Solar system tho
The other way around ...? < 1.0 was for 2-body
(assuming I understood the Wikipedia article that is)
aye that's what I meant
18:39
ah. aha
it's still accelerating at a clip though given it's going to more than double it's velocity in the next 24
Why is it blue-green?
green would be carbon no?
and some refraction?
I'm also not sure that's not a RGB composite
refraction wouldn't apply to cameras outside earth atmosphere, would it?
Oooh. that might make a question for the site
@Everyone why not? it's mostly water vapor
Didn't think of that ... you're prolly right
most of it should dissipate, imo
how do I determine the amount of temperature increase it's front encounters from the acceleration due to Sol's gravity?
< 0.1AU too
@TildalWave No. I have absolutely nothing against Canadians. I was talking about how the joke may have come from the 1930's originally.
The version that I first read, probably at least 20 years ago was all Americans.
I was active duty army, and we never missed out on a chance to make fun of the navy. :-)
18:58
@Donald.McLean Not the air-force? (+:
@Everyone Just ask yourself what is the hardest fought football rivalry between the service academies.
@Donald I wouldn't know really; not based out of CONUS
the problem with a lego hubble
Traditionally, I'm told, Army & Navy team up
is where do you put it :P
19:01
Why you put it ... oh.... a lego hubble. Never mind ...
lol
I wonder if someone will one day make a lego rocket that can launch a lego hubble
They'd need lego men, and women to orient the 'scope then
@RealzSlaw It would require a lego shuttle.
that's so cool
@Donald.McLean, sure
I'll take it
19:03
Are launch vehicle payload packed in foam, or such to protect them from the high acceleration at launch?
The Hubble was specifically designed to exactly fit in the Shuttle bay, making it the largest single object launched by shuttle.
just build me a space elevator, someone
That's the problem with gracefully deorbiting it - there's nothing big enough to carry it down.
those designs are really cool
yesterday, by TildalWave
Although really, the damage was done when the party planners took the hole punch to the elevator ribbon to hang up the sign.
19:06
lol
Nah. I like the earlier one better; it's easier on the mind
p.s. answer the question!
@Everyone ask on the site
get fake internet points
points are real, but the cake is a lie
19:10
I'd rather have the cake too
I'd rather eat it
I'd rather eat someone else's cake
good thing about cakes is they have a best before date so you have to eat them
Sure. What about the one that someone threw at the Sun?
Mmmmmm, cake.
The "best before" date for cake is always "as soon as possible".
19:15
Ugh. I'm sleepy
'nini
Anyone want to do the acceleration question?
what are we accelerating?
payload in a launch vehicle
how is the payload restrained from bouncing around within the craft?
and from damage elsewise due to the acceleration at launch. Most of these spacecraft are doing better than Mach 1 just clearing the gantry
styrofoam peanuts?
if it survives being shipped as a UPS parcel, it'll survive the launch to space too
It's not shipped as a UPS parcel, is it?
you could test it that way
bubblewrap?
19:21
dunno; prolly no
@Everyone Proper tie down should be enough. There isn't any packaging on car transporters.
@Donald.McLean Clamps then?
Sorry, no idea. I haven't been working on the project that long.
No worries. Care to draft the question? I'm just too tired to framethe question tonight
the mirrors for JWST came in boxes I saw same pics of it
19:25
Was the JWST assembled in orbit then?
right. 'm off. 'nini
@Everyone JWST hasn't even been assembled yet.
But no, it's going up on an Arianne 5. That's one of the key contributions of ESA.
this was in boxes then
gimme one
looks like little chocolates
not so little
well
scale is hard to tell :P
19:30
there's 3 people shifting one at the bottom
oh!
camo :P
oompa loompas anyway, they are
shrunken oompa loompas
20:02
Cm'on, people! The 10k tools should never look like this!
@Undo In that case I'm proud of Astro today.
Lucky.
looks through Astro for stuff to migrate to Space
hey now!
Astro needs what it has
Too bad you didn't make a commitment to Astro...oh, wait. ;)
I fulfilled my Astro commitment!
(And Jon advised me to focus on Space)
rats
probably good advice for you
20:15
You are doing pretty well, though.
but if you see anyone else, tell them to go to Astro
@Undo rofl :P
@Undo how do you fulfill a commitment
Participate actively in the private beta until it goes public
@RealzSlaw It's an Area 51 thing. You commit that you'll be active on a site during its beta.
@called2voyage ah, how is "actively" measured
20:16
post on occasion
@Undo I know, I commited to astronomy.SE
or edit or comment
@called2voyage You have a huge typo on your front page. You shoul... ah, nevermind. I fixed it for you.
Lack of capitalization is not a typo
@called2voyage A misplaced 'L' is.
20:17
I would have fixed it, but I like to leave things for other users to earn rep
@called2voyage Umm....
oh I see now
missed that one
One of the biggest problems that Astro has is that they pretty much live in Space's chatroom :P
@Undo That's not without me trying.
20:19
So we have a huge influence,
I didn't come in here for like a month.
Making it easy for us to stear Astro,
For no good reason.
The other problem is that @TildalWave likes to pretend he's a mod of Astro too. ;)
I'm just kidding for the record.
I appreciate his help.
Did I wake you up?
20:21
you rang m'lord?
No, too early for that, but I'm getting ready to go out
I was just poking fun at you.
mentally preparing, it's damn cold out, not yet used to it
It's getting pretty cold here in the Atlanta area.
@called2voyage well done you! :))
I wouldn't call it damn cold yet, but pretty cold.
20:23
I call it damn cold because I'm not used to it yet, it's not really that cold tho, maybe just a degree below zero C
oh ok, about the same here then...at least part of the time
Oh, @TildalWave and @Called, you should probably look at Space's user page. I kinda broke something.
didn't get my winter stuff out yet so it'll be double sweater
Turns out MathJax works in the location.
That's a feature.
20:24
HAHAHA
@Undo looks nice to me
OK brb
The real question is will mathjax overflow from your location to another person's location.
That's what I'm working on.
Do you need my help?
Sure.
20:26
Put only one set of $$ in your location.
I put some $$ in mine.
Mmm, I wonder if I can make it look like I have 100k rep or something?
lol
mathhax
I'm going to stop before I get whacked with something.
It doesn't look like it breaks anything to me.
besides messing with spacing
which is really an unavoidable problem in web design
21:04
lol
@Undo ask on security.SE
> How do I use mathjax to hack my reputation ?
21:54
@RealzSlaw Oh dear...
:-)
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