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tastefullyoffensive: (via superwoman34f)

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tastefullyoffensive:

(via superwoman34f)

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jslade
3245 days ago
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Newfoundland, Canada
popular
3255 days ago
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glenn
3255 days ago
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smooth af
Waterloo, Canada
JayM
3255 days ago
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:)
Atlanta, GA
skittone
3255 days ago
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Ha.

March 31, 2013

2 Comments and 11 Shares

And, since I botched that link yesterday... Did I mention Michael's books are free for the next few days?
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jslade
4249 days ago
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Newfoundland, Canada
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rewingau
4252 days ago
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This is disturbingly plausible.
Canberra, Australian Capital T
adamgurri
4252 days ago
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how lolcats destroyed the world
New York, NY

New weather site: Forecast

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From the team that brought you Dark Sky, an app that has saved (or at least kept dry) my bacon more times than I can count, comes Forecast, a weather web site that incorporates several of the features that made Dark Sky great. From the announcement:

Rather than cram these things into Dark Sky, we decided to do something grander: create our own full-featured weather service from scratch, complete with 7-day forecasts that cover the whole world, beautiful weather visualizations, and a time machine for exploring the weather in the past and far future. You can access it from all of your devices, whether it be your laptop, iPhone, Android phone, or tablet.

On top of all that, we're providing this data to other developers, in the hopes that a truly independent weather community can thrive in the era of increasing corporate consolidation.

Tags: weather
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jslade
4256 days ago
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Newfoundland, Canada
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macjustice
4257 days ago
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Fucking gorgeous, and so much info.
Seattle
satadru
4257 days ago
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hot
New York, NY

Voyager

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Voyager

With today's technology, would it be possible to launch an unmanned mission to retrieve Voyager I?

—Elliott Bennett

Voyager Iis farther from Earth than any other manmade object. After getting a pair of gravitational kicks from Jupiter and Saturn, it’s headed out of the Solar System at a pretty high speed, and nothing else we’ve built is on track to pass it.

Strangely, as of the day I’m writing this, Voyageris actually getting closerto us, because Earth is in a part of its orbit where it’s approaching Voyagerfaster than Voyageris fleeing. But in a few months, we’ll swing around the Sun and Voyagerwill again be getting farther away.

It has a 35-year head start, so it would be hard to catch. But catching up isn’t the problem.

New Horizons, the spacecraft currently headed out of the Solar System by way of Pluto, is never going to catch up to Voyager—it’s not moving fast enough and it’s headed in the wrong direction.But it could have.

The reason Voyageris moving so fast is that it got gravitational assists from Jupiter and Saturn, while New Horizonsonly got one from Jupiter.

Gravity assists aren’t paradoxical magic. It’s just like bouncing a tennis ball off a passing truck. Gyroscopes, on the other hand, ARE magic.

If New Horizonshad ditched the Pluto objective and waited for the right planetary alignment (the 2030s look promising), it could have swung by Jupiter and Saturn, then caught up to Voyagerin as little as a century or two! (Assuming we could manage to hit Voyager from that far away. But I bet we could; our rocket scientists are pretty good at rocket science.)

Of course, getting there’s the easy part. The hard part is getting back.

Voyagerweighs a little less than a ton and is moving away at 17 kilometers per second (if it were in the atmosphere, that would be Mach 50). And since it’s out in interstellar space, there are no speeding Jupiters to grab on to. Stopping Voyageris going to take a lotof fuel.

It’s what engineers call the tyranny of the rocket equation: As the amount that you want to change your speed (“delta-v”) goes up, the fuel required increases exponentially. The equation tells us that to turn the 720-kilogram Voyageraround, we’re going to need at least 30tonsof fuel.

But to get thatfuel out there, we need even morefuel. And to get thatfuel, we need even morefuel. (This is where the tyrannical rocket equation gets its exponential term.) In fact, to rescue Voyager, we’d have to launch a fleet of—at minimum—60 New Horizons-sized spacecraft loaded with nothing but fuel.

Could we do it? Sure. There are a couple plausible ways. Instead of building five to ten dozen fuel-laden Titan IIIEs, we could just build a fleet of ten or fifteen Saturn Vs, and do the whole thing with fewer launches. But however we did it, it would be a massive and expensive operation similar in scale to the Apollo program.

The difference between the launch vehicle we’d used to get Voyager out of the Solar System and the fleet we’d need for a round trip is striking:

Fortunately, there’s one way around the tyranny of the rocket equation: Ditch the rockets.

Ion engines—which use electric fields to accelerate exhaust gas to high speeds—are far more efficient than chemical rockets, and they make accelerating to high speeds much more plausible.

The reason we’re not using them for everything is that they produce very little thrust, so it takes a long time to get up to speed. It’s like if you had a car that gets amazing mileage but has a one-horsepower engine. (Actually, are you sure that’s not just a horse?) Ion engines are great; the current ones just take forever to get you moving.

But since catching Voyageris going to take a long time anyway, ion engines are fine. We could launch a probe (like this one), send it out to Voyager, latch on, turn everything around, and let it spend a few decades slowing Voyager down.

Once Voyager had lost nearly all its speed, the Sun’s gravity would take over, and the probe would begin a long slow slide toward the inner Solar System. This would take about 200 years, and with some extremely careful nudges, we could make sure it falls in an Earth-crossing orbit.

Two centuries later, Voyagerwould reach Earth and, with no way to slow down, burn up in our atmosphere, because we didn’t think to send out an aerobraking shell with the rescue craft. So that was a waste of a few centuries of work and billions upon billions of dollars.

Maybe a better idea would be to borrow a salvage vessel and set sail for the coast of New South Wales, Australia. There, in the waters off Jervis Bay, the Australian Royal Navy ship Voyagersank in 1964 after an accidental collision.

That one’s probably easier to retrieve.

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jslade
4256 days ago
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Newfoundland, Canada
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stsquad
4255 days ago
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Yet another great What If from xkcd.
Cambridge, UK
galmeida
4255 days ago
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With today's technology, would it be possible to launch an unmanned mission to retrieve Voyager I?

—Elliott Bennett
copyninja
4255 days ago
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Really good one. But question is why we want voyager back it was supposed to go out not come back doh!
India
jepler
4257 days ago
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short answer: no, not really
Earth, Sol system, Western spiral arm
zeroDi
4255 days ago
"no, not really" is not even quarter as interesting as the whole description ;)
rclatterbuck
4257 days ago
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I bet we would get more recycled scrap out of ARNS Voyager too.

March 25, 2013

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Bets video ever?

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jslade
4258 days ago
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Newfoundland, Canada
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Tilda Swinton is sleeping at MoMA

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At random and unannounced times throughout the year, actress (and apparently performance artist) Tilda Swinton will be sleeping in a glass box at MoMA.

Tilda Swinton MoMA

It's part of an unannounced, surprise performance piece called "The Maybe" that will be taking place on random days all year. A MoMA source told us, "Museum staff doesn't know she's coming until the day of, but she's here today. She'll be there the whole day. All that's in the box is cushions and a water jug."

Clearly some crowdsourced announcement system is needed...perhaps istildaswintonsleepingatmomaornot.tumblr.com? Also, in keeping with the theme of "my kid could do that" in contemporary art, both my kids slept at MoMA in chairs with wheels on them.

Tags: MoMA   NYC   Tilda Swinton   art
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jslade
4258 days ago
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Well, alright then.
Newfoundland, Canada
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satadru
4259 days ago
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She couldn't just get a Pied à terre?
New York, NY
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