Re: Astronomy
Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2023 12:16 pm
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One BIG Difference between you and me, jimb, is that my goal is not to take away happiness from anyone, not even from you. You take away happiness from many by your mere presence.jimboston wrote:My Astronomy Sign said…jusplay4fun wrote:As I said jimbo, the topic here is Astronomy, not Astrology. I guess you failed to COMPREHEND that nuance.![]()
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Thank goodness that you do not have the same Zodiac sign as me.![]()
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Not even you!It will be a smooth day for you and you will get the happiness in your life. No one will able to take your happiness from you.
YES!jusplay4fun wrote:One BIG Difference between you and me, jimb, is that my goal is not to take away happiness from anyone, not even from you. You take away happiness from many by your mere presence.jimboston wrote:My Astronomy Sign said…jusplay4fun wrote:As I said jimbo, the topic here is Astronomy, not Astrology. I guess you failed to COMPREHEND that nuance.![]()
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Thank goodness that you do not have the same Zodiac sign as me.![]()
![]()
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Not even you!It will be a smooth day for you and you will get the happiness in your life. No one will able to take your happiness from you.
What are “may people” ? I said many. Did you FAIL Reading comprehension again? or spelling TOO?jimboston wrote:YES!jusplay4fun wrote:One BIG Difference between you and me, jimb, is that my goal is not to take away happiness from anyone, not even from you. You take away happiness from many by your mere presence.jimboston wrote:My Astronomy Sign said…jusplay4fun wrote:As I said jimbo, the topic here is Astronomy, not Astrology. I guess you failed to COMPREHEND that nuance.![]()
![]()
Thank goodness that you do not have the same Zodiac sign as me.![]()
![]()
![]()
Not even you!It will be a smooth day for you and you will get the happiness in your life. No one will able to take your happiness from you.
Success… if by “may people” you mean you.

You said it, jimbo; another mistake by you. I am glad that you got that out. Do you want to confess more shortcomings? Is this the right time for such revelations?jimboston wrote:Another typo on an iPad… I am obviously soooo dumb.
Your attempt at stealing Mookie;s joke is lame.jusplay4fun wrote:You said it, jimbo; another mistake by you. I am glad that you got that out. Do you want to confess more shortcomings? Is this the right time for such revelations?jimboston wrote:Another typo on an iPad… I am obviously soooo dumb.
Someone is knocking on that Door jimb. I think this person wants to talk to you and not to your wife.
As I have said before, jimbo, it is NOT JUST the ONE Typo, but the repeated carelessness that this error demonstrates. I said then that this typo gives evidence of your careless thought pattern, the shallowness of your (poor) analysis, and your lack of logic. Sloppy writing emanates from YOUR sloppy mind. Your careless writing manifests the careless and sloppy thinking that you do. THAT is the key point that you keep MISSING.jimboston wrote:Your attempt at stealing Mookie;s joke is lame.jusplay4fun wrote:You said it, jimbo; another mistake by you. I am glad that you got that out. Do you want to confess more shortcomings? Is this the right time for such revelations?jimboston wrote:Another typo on an iPad… I am obviously soooo dumb.
Someone is knocking on that Door jimb. I think this person wants to talk to you and not to your wife.
Not as lame as your belief that typo = dumb.


I know he’s got a big head, but it’s not THAT big.Dukasaur wrote:Most of the cosmos is nothingness.
https://www.wtamu.edu/~cbaird/sq/2012/1 ... reactions.Space is not empty. A point in outer space is filled with gas, dust, a wind of charged particles from the stars, light from stars, cosmic rays, radiation left over from the Big Bang, gravity, electric and magnetic fields, and neutrinos from nuclear reactions. As the book "Nothingness: The Science of Empty Space" by Dr. Henning Genz describes, space is also filled with two things we can't directly detect: dark matter and dark energy. Even if all these things could be removed and blocked out from a certain region of space, there would still be three things we could never remove according to Dr. Genz: (1) vacuum energy, (2) the Higgs field, and (3) spacetime curvature.
(...)
Perfectly "empty" space will always have vacuum energy, the Higgs field, and spacetime curvature. More typical vacuums, such as in outer space, also have gas, dust, wind, light, electric fields, magnetic fields, cosmic rays, neutrinos, dark matter, and dark energy. Despite all these things zipping around in outer space, space does seem empty to earth-bound humans who are used to a dense layer of air to swim around in. These concepts are summarized in the list below.
https://www.wtamu.edu/~cbaird/sq/faqs/About this Website
1. What are Dr. Baird's qualifications for providing answers to science questions?
For the past six years, Dr. Baird has been a physics professor at West Texas A&M University. In this capacity, he teaches numerous entry-level and upper-level university courses and carries out research on quantum devices. Dr. Baird recently won academic tenure and was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor of Physics at West Texas A&M University. Previous to coming to West Texas A&M University, he was an adjunct physics professor for ten years at the University of Massachusetts Lowell and senior research scientist at the Submillimeter-Wave Technology Laboratory. While at UMass Lowell, Dr. Baird taught electromagnetics courses to PhD students and supervised PhD student research in the laboratory.
It has been too cloudy where I am to view the comet, now I know where to look.2dimes on Fri Feb 03, 2023 7:59 am
Could a person post actual thoughts in the astronomy thread, in response to a question about observing a green comet, instead of random things copied from other websites? Of course. Or was that your point? By the way did you observe the comet from your yard and were you using a telescope? It's been too cloudy here all week.
I can post more of such things, but why carry on a conversation with myself? Ignoring the recent obvious and intended insults, this thread draws few comments. However, this thread does get LOTS of LOOKS (Views) I have noticed.Re: Astronomy!
Postby jusplay4fun on Sat Jan 06, 2018 6:04 am
OK, I bundled up (at 5 Degrees F) and I saw the planets Jupiter, Mars, AND the double star of Libra.....very cool and very cold. With sunrise at about 6:25 here, I may go out one more time to see the two planets even closer. Without binoculars, I could not see Mars, really. It is a faint dot, once I realized where it is in the sky. Once I picked it up in binoculars, I saw the faint dot with my naked eyes.
Two tips told to me by good star gazers:
1) stars twinkle and planets do not; this is an easy way to tell stars from planets;
2) your fist, held at arm's length from your body, is 5 degrees; so 10 degrees above the horizon is two fists above it. TRY IT..!
the Sky and Telescope site I cited earlier is a good aid to find the planet conjuncture. There is even mention further down the page about a comet, but its best was 1/4/18 and I likely need a telescope, and getting away from city lights.....I did not read into that topic enough, but that is for 2dimes to check out with his telescope.
VERY COOL to see ALL that this cold morning.
JP4FUN (in the COLD)

I guess it’s time to have that conversation with the wife about Mookie?Feb 8, 2023 - Unfortunately, Aries, this may be a period of conflict and tension in your family life, especially where siblings are concerned. Don't you think it's time to deal with these problems once and for all? It would be nice to build a new relationship with them. It might be painful, but it's up to you to take the first step. Call a family meeting and put all your cards on the table.
Is this comment supposed to bring you good fortune?Dukasaur wrote:Did anybody have any luck seeing the green comet?
Here we've had overcast skies the entire time. I had zero chance to spot it.
NO luck here. Too many clouds and I cannot get a clear guidance to look where it SHOULD be. I think around Feb. 10 it will be a near a bright star, if clouds cooperate.Dukasaur wrote:Did anybody have any luck seeing the green comet?
Here we've had overcast skies the entire time. I had zero chance to spot it.

https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-n ... ary-17-26/WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22
■ Now the crescent Moon hangs hardly more than 1° to the right of Jupiter over Venus, as shown above. Think photo opportunity! Get some nice scenery silhouetted in the foreground, zoom in, and prop your phone or camera on something solid so it can take time exposures.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23
■ Sirius blazes high in the south on the meridian by about 8 or 9 p.m. now. Using binoculars or a scope at low power, examine the spot 4° south of Sirius (directly below it when on the meridian). Four degrees is somewhat less than the width of a typical binocular's or finderscope's field of view.
Can you see a little patch of speckly gray haze? That's the open star cluster M41, about 2,200 light-years away. Its total magnitude adds up to 5.0.
Sirius, by comparison, is only 8.6 light-years away — and shines some 400 times brighter.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24
■ After dinnertime at this time of year, five carnivore constellations are rising upright in a row from the northeast to south, as if out of hibernation. They're all seen in profile with their noses pointed up and their feet (if any) to the right. These are Ursa Major the Big Bear in the northeast (with the Big Dipper as its brightest part), Leo the Lion in the east, dim Hydra the Sea Serpent in the southeast, Canis Minor the Little Dog higher in the south-southeast, and bright Canis Major the Big Dog in the south.

https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-n ... ary-17-26/SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26
■ First-quarter Moon (exactly first quarter at 3:06 a.m. tonight EST). This evening the Moon shines between Aldebaran and the Pleiades, as shown below. Mars is off to the Moon's left.
https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-n ... ary-17-26/THIS WEEK'S PLANET ROUNDUP
Mercury is hidden deep in the sunrise.
Venus and Jupiter, the two brightest planets, shine boldly in the west-southwest at dusk. Venus is the lower and brighter one; they're magnitudes –3.9 and –2.1, respectively.
They're drawing closer together every day. On Friday the 17th they're 12° apart and closing fast; a week later on the 24th they're only 5° apart. They're on their way to a close conjunction on March 1st, when they'll pass just half a degree apart.
Telescopically Venus is a shimmering little gibbous ball, 12 arcseconds in diameter and 87% sunlit. Jupiter is 34 arcseconds wide. That's small for Jupiter; it's nearly on the other side of the solar system from us. Jupiter displays a strikingly dimmer surface brightness in a telescope. That's because it's nearly 7 times farther from the illuminating Sun than Venus is.
Use binoculars to check in on the pinpoint moons of Jupiter, very close to its globe.

Such a dome would allow a trained navigator to perform astronavigation and thereby guide the aircraft at night without the aid of land-based visual references.