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Science Trivia

#286 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Goto {lang:icon}

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Posted 24 August 2007 - 08:09 AM

Aww, I totally knew that one. My fault for not checking the topic, I guess. bluetongue.gif
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#287 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zziggywolf5 {lang:icon}

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Posted 02 September 2007 - 03:14 PM

New Question Bump

QUOTE (JGJTan @ Jul 17 2008, 04:48 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I endorse stalking. :thumb:
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#288 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 04 September 2007 - 07:49 PM

Easy one then.

Olbers Paradox:
Assuming a Solid State Universe, meaning infinite size and eternal, the light of all the stars as one extrapolates out towards infinity would result in our night sky being as bright as day. Olber (who was not the first to ask this question, though) asked why then is the sky obviously dark. His answer was the interstellar medium is full fo dusk obscuring the light of all the stars from reaching us. (Assuming an infinite universe, as you go out towards infinity, the volume would reach infinity, so it is a plausible argument in one sense). But he is wrong for an important reason. Why can it not be clouds obscuring our view of the light?

(And no answering simply that we know it is a finite universe, not the question here. bluetongue.gif)
#: ssh God@Heaven.org
Password: CurvedSpace
/God> rm *

The BEST error message ever: "Cowardly refusing to create an empty archive."
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#289 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 04 September 2007 - 09:20 PM

The stars would look fuzzier and bigger than points because the dust would scatter the light
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#290 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 05 September 2007 - 07:12 PM

Nope. With infinite obscuration from the clouds, no light would reach us. So it has to do with what happens when all the light is absorbed by the clouds.
#: ssh God@Heaven.org
Password: CurvedSpace
/God> rm *

The BEST error message ever: "Cowardly refusing to create an empty archive."
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#291 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Goto {lang:icon}

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Posted 09 September 2007 - 05:13 AM

It's not an example I've heard before, but just as a stab in the dark...

If all of the (infinite) light is absorbed by the clouds, they'd have to radiate that energy back out again as they couldn't continuously absorb energy eternally? And of course if that was the case then it would no longer be dark.
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#292 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 11 September 2007 - 06:15 PM

Correct! thumb.gif Thermal Radiation would cause the clouds to radiate the light back out after absorbing it. So it would end up bright anyways. The clouds were what olber believed to be the reason for the darkness, but they didnt know much about Thermal Dynamics back then from what I understand.
#: ssh God@Heaven.org
Password: CurvedSpace
/God> rm *

The BEST error message ever: "Cowardly refusing to create an empty archive."
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#293 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 14 September 2007 - 05:55 PM

New Question then, unless Goto wants to take it.

If I were to say that I am currently located at the point where the big bang took place, I would be partially correct. Why?
#: ssh God@Heaven.org
Password: CurvedSpace
/God> rm *

The BEST error message ever: "Cowardly refusing to create an empty archive."
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#294 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 September 2007 - 12:53 AM

because the universe at the big bang was infinitesimally small, as I understand it, and it expanded from there, i.e. this spot, as well as all others, were there
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#295 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 04:35 AM

We have a winner!
#: ssh God@Heaven.org
Password: CurvedSpace
/God> rm *

The BEST error message ever: "Cowardly refusing to create an empty archive."
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#296 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 11:54 AM

What do alligators use their nictitating membranes for?
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#297 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ratty {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 12:18 PM

To nictitate?
Empty sig is empty.
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#298 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zziggywolf5 {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 04:13 PM

To see underwater?

QUOTE (JGJTan @ Jul 17 2008, 04:48 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I endorse stalking. :thumb:
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#299 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Moogalite {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 10:42 PM

They use it when they aren't underwater or hunting so as to protect the eyes from debris in water/ wind.

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#300 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 September 2007 - 10:42 PM

Funny rat bluetongue.gif. Nictitate = wink or blink. I imagine the name for it comes from the fact it tends to show briefly (in many animals that have them, such as dog and cats) when the animal blinks.

Well, that is one Ziggy, but it's probably not strictly necessary for that. Elaborate bluetongue.gif

And no, they use it mostly underwater. They don't need it doing things like basking in the sun. *waits to see if there was perhaps a typo*
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