i'm thinking they learn how to jump universes and just keep jumping from the old ones to younger ones, younger ones that maybe they even create themselves.
so what iteration are we in if everything is infinite? /mindisblown
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I laffed .... the combination of two statements on that screen
Attachment 276261
Also, I probably shouldn't worry about any single aspect of my or my family's life.
Physics has really validated that whole "All material things are impermanent" aspect of Buddhism, eh?
Yes, very cool video. I kind of lost interest after Earth was destroyed, but man how awesome would it be to live that long to see it happen.
Crow T. Robot : [gazing at the stars] I feel so insignificant... then again, I ALWAYS feel insignificant.
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More evidence for deep groundwater on Mars: https://phys.org/news/2019-03-eviden...ater-mars.html
She’d been told that childbirth was going to be painful. But as the hours wore on, nothing bothered her — even without an epidural. “I could feel that my body was changing, but it didn’t hurt me,” recalled the woman, Jo Cameron, who is now 71. She likened it to “a tickle.”...She also reported that eating Scotch bonnet chili peppers left only a “pleasant glow.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/28/h...n-anxiety.html
It's amazing that she's survived to this point; pain in proper measure is your friend.
https://youtu.be/gEyXTQ9do-c
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I wonder about the time scale in that video - not saying it's wrong, wtf do I know? - but I've generally seen estimates that the universe is approximately 14 billion years old and that all the stars will be extinguished by about 100 billion years. The times in the video are longer than that by many orders of magnitude.
Asimov - The Last Question
with a brief preamble by the author
It's a long time from a big fire to completely cool ashes. Haven't watched the video yet but huge time scales and the possible ends of the universe are so far out there that they don't even make my head hurt. I've been too a few of the astronomy on tap events and the ones about possible ends of the universe are hard to understand.
we watched that timelapse video and it was excellent
wish they would have included "when the plastics break down" though
also currently reading the walter isaacson book on einstein so timely
Multiple outlets are reporting on an upcoming journal article claiming to have identified a mass death deposit related to the K/T boundary and Chicxulub impact. The New Yorker has the most in-depth article.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2...dinosaurs-died
Swiss firm claims to have made a 1,000 Wh/kg Li battery, and to have done it using a safer inorganic electrolyte solution. As the article details, it's an extremely bold claim.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/4/18...gh-lithium-ion
Wow; bold indeed.
This shit is going down...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dr20f19czeE
https://twitter.com/EU_Commission/st...lack-hole-news
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrQZi02LKQY
Scott Manley has a take on the topic as well.
Frankly, I expected it to be blacker than that.
w000t! Shep Doeleman ’86
Buster, you know Shep? I worked at CfA before moving out west (I'm not an astrophysicist, but I have stayed at a Holiday Inn).