Youngest Planet Confirmed; Photos Show It Grew Up Fast
39 replies, posted
:unsmith::hf::unsmith:
[QUOTE=Quo Vadi;22517079]the same could've been said of getting to the moon in 1969
look into antimatter propulsion, it's somewhat promising if we ever make a large amount of accelerators[/QUOTE]
And the power supply.
How did they know the planets aged?
[QUOTE=Quo Vadi;22517079]the same could've been said of getting to the moon in 1969
look into antimatter propulsion, it's somewhat promising if we ever make a large amount of accelerators[/QUOTE]
We would need an assimov array.
We're a longgggg ass way from that.
[editline]09:52PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=Oecleus;22539259]How did they know the planets aged?[/QUOTE]
Cause it was there a little while ago.
And it's still there now.
[QUOTE=decilling;22531935]holy shit your avatar is awesome :unsmith:[/QUOTE]
thx m8
[QUOTE=bravehat;22539659]We would need an assimov array.
We're a longgggg ass way from that.
[/QUOTE]
Well the One and Only God Charles Pellegrino said the construction would take a few years, but it would take a couple of decades to get the nanotech for that.
Fuck yeah Asimov Arrays in 40 years :unsmith:
[QUOTE]We would require an array of solar powered linear accelerators ('atom smashers') girdling the moon's equator. Mega-engineering projects require, in their own turn, miniature self-replicating factories that draw building materials directly from the lunar soil. Current advances in robot technology teach us that we should be able to climb this technological hurdle by about 2040.[/QUOTE]
It's 9 times larger than Jupiter. Some large friggin planet.
OH YEAH ORbIT ME BABY
Reminds me of this
[img]http://28.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_l0shrflpzY1qa2mp8o1_500.jpg[/img]
It’s actually 581d that’s the supposedly habitable planet with water. I didnt make that image. And they spelled the name of it wrong.
[QUOTE=TwatWaffle;22631652]Reminds me of this
[img]http://28.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_l0shrflpzY1qa2mp8o1_500.jpg[/img]
It’s actually 581d that’s the supposedly habitable planet with water. I didnt make that image. And they spelled the name of it wrong.[/QUOTE]
I don't know where the creator of that image got his information, but it's a bit bigger than 1.6x earth, it's about 7 - 11 times.
a bit more info here
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gliese_581_d[/url]
but nonetheless it still looks like it might be an awesome place to check out
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