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Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,933
8,176
113
#22
The link within the article links to another article "The highest form of intelligence: sarcasm..."
Strange that 4-year-olds are so good at using it...
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
24,722
13,395
113
#24
Bumblebees beat their wings 200 times a second, which is 10-20x as fast as nerve impulses can fire :oops:
I wonder who had the nerve to investigate this, let alone write about it.
😉
 
Mar 6, 2023
58
41
18
#25
Cambridge University ...
While researching aerodynamics of bumblebees.

I found a bunch of amazing attributes about the honey bee,
After I needed to relocate a hive that had taken up residence
in one of My exterior walls !
The drywall inside was warm from the amount bees and hive size :oops:

Alas I digress.
Apologies Honored Posters.
Back on topic, over to you dino246. ;)
 

CarriePie

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2024
664
377
63
Oklahoma
#29
It is said that it takes approximately 37,000 years to travel one light year.
According to NASA the Horsehead Nebula is 5 light years tall. Let's say you traveled those 5 light years, it would take you approximately 185,000 years to travel across. Starting at other points though, traveling across would take less time (it's not as wide as it is tall, of course). It will still take over 100,000 years to get across (if we use the measurement of it taking 37,000 years to travel a light year).
Note: Different sources give different measurements of the Horsehead Nebula.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,933
8,176
113
#30
It is said that it takes approximately 37,000 years to travel one light year.
According to NASA the Horsehead Nebula is 5 light years tall. Let's say you traveled those 5 light years, it would take you approximately 185,000 years to travel across. Starting at other points though, traveling across would take less time (it's not as wide as it is tall, of course). It will still take over 100,000 years to get across (if we use the measurement of it taking 37,000 years to travel a light year).
Note: Different sources give different measurements of the Horsehead Nebula.
Who decided it would take 37,000 years to travel one light year?

In a frictionless void even a thruster with a very small initial output could build up a lot of speed over time.
 

Gojira

Well-known member
Jul 20, 2021
5,741
2,311
113
Mesa, AZ
#31
It is said that it takes approximately 37,000 years to travel one light year.
According to NASA the Horsehead Nebula is 5 light years tall. Let's say you traveled those 5 light years, it would take you approximately 185,000 years to travel across. Starting at other points though, traveling across would take less time (it's not as wide as it is tall, of course). It will still take over 100,000 years to get across (if we use the measurement of it taking 37,000 years to travel a light year).
Note: Different sources give different measurements of the Horsehead Nebula.
At what rate of speed?
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
5,950
1,697
113
#32
At what rate of speed?
Warp, no doubt, if you count a single Blitzen rate, couple that with Donder, as well as Dasher and Dancer, and the rest of the reindeer team... how much horsepower does that even amount to?... idk, it might take a couple of weeks.
 

Gojira

Well-known member
Jul 20, 2021
5,741
2,311
113
Mesa, AZ
#33
Folks, this is how big these nebulae are... consider this.

The Orion Nebula, e.g., is about 10 to 25 light-years across. This is about 60 to 150 trillion miles. That nebula would encompass our sun, Sirius (8.7 LY away), Procyon (11.45 LY away), Altair (16.7 LY), almost all the way to Vega (~27 LY away).

To give you an idea of how far away this thing is, this ~25 trillion LY-wide cloud is a small blueish smudge in the winter sky. 25 trillion LY wide, at ~1,500 LY away, looks like a smudge slightly larger than the stars comprising the constellation. (The above-mentioned stars would fit into that smudge.)

And, you must bear in mind that this thing's a stellar "neighbor". Its distance from us is only about 1.5% the width of our galaxy.

The Andromeda galaxy's about 2 million LY away. That's about 20 Milky Way galaxy diameters. And, that's just a galactic neighbor.

There is no Other.
 

Gojira

Well-known member
Jul 20, 2021
5,741
2,311
113
Mesa, AZ
#34
Warp, no doubt, if you count a single Blitzen rate, couple that with Donder, as well as Dasher and Dancer, and the rest of the reindeer team... how much horsepower does that even amount to?... idk, it might take a couple of weeks.
Hey, if Santa does it, it's over night.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
5,950
1,697
113
#37
With Rudolph leading the way you think?
I'm pretty sure the horsehead nebula is where Santa got all his reindeer, with the exception of Rudolph who is from the Eagle nebula (which contains the Pillars of Creation, btw) so they would know their way just as well without him, notwithstanding the chances of fog of course.
 

Gojira

Well-known member
Jul 20, 2021
5,741
2,311
113
Mesa, AZ
#38
I'm pretty sure the horsehead nebula is where Santa got all his reindeer, with the exception of Rudolph who is from the Eagle nebula (which contains the Pillars of Creation, btw) so they would know their way just as well without him, notwithstanding the chances of fog of course.
Excellent speculation. These are possibilities I've never considered.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
5,950
1,697
113
#39
The enzyme that produces bioluminescence in fireflies, which are neither bugs nor flies but are actually beetles, is called luciferase.
And there is a femme fatale species of firefly that frequents the fireflies' singles bar' happy hour and mimics the flash of males in order to lure them within chomping distance.
 

PennEd

Senior Member
Apr 22, 2013
12,956
8,671
113
#40
A group of engineering students from Purdue University reported that its licking machine, modeled after a human tongue, took an average of 364 licks to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop. Twenty of the group's volunteers assumed the licking challenge-unassisted by machinery-and averaged 252 licks each to the center.

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