• AA5B@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Holy crap yeah, you can’t even build one high speed rail line with that! You couldn’t even rebuild the World Trade Center in NYC with that! That’s less than the Big Dig rebuilding a couple miles of highway in Boston! How are we keeping NASA so poor when they consistently deliver science that is both literally and figuratively out of this world?

      Until we can multiply that budget, “all your [phones] are belong to [NASA]”

      • gaifux@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        How does this guy complaining about funding mean he lacks critical thinking? This place is more full of thoughtless agitprop than Reddit. Your botlike comment is useless and could be a response to anything. This place sucks lol

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Could it be something like the overall funding for an institution is not relevant to crowdsourcing one research project? Or maybe that no matter what you think about overall budget, that has nothing to do with trying to get millions of sensors in place? Or maybe that regardless of government funding, citizen participation in science is exciting and cool?

          Edit: or maybe it’s just a throwaway comment trying to stir outrage, rather than having any relevance to continuing a discussion

  • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    I’m honestly confused what they can get with shitty, massively processed smartphone sensors at low zoom. I understand the premise of stuff like radio telescopes distributed over a large area, but the quality of cell phone cameras just isn’t that high for anything at any kind of distance.

    Even with my Canon 5D Mk3, with a 500m lens multiplied to 1000mm by a teleconverter, and a solar film to manage how insanely powerful the sun is, the quality just isn’t that high:

    sun

    I’m not seeing what a few hundred heavily processed pixels tell you even if you have a lot of samples.

    • Harriet_Porber@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Earth’s natural satellite can serve as a valuable research partner in measuring the sun’s oblateness. This is due to a phenomenon known as “Baily’s beads,” which are the tiny flashes of light during an eclipse that occur as solar light passes over the moon’s rugged terrain of craters, hills, and valleys. Since satellite imagery has helped produce extremely detailed mappings of lunar topography, experts can match Baily’s beads to the moon’s features as it passes in front of the sun.

      The way I’m guessing this works is: Baily’s beads will be detectable on shitty cameras since they will be distinct flashes of light, and since we have very detailed information of the moon’s topography they can determine information on the sun based on your phone’s location and the timing of the flashes of light.

      And if that is how it works, that is fuckin rad. A+ science.

  • yarr@feddit.nl
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    7 months ago

    Oh dear, it appears the once-great NASA has now stooped so low as to beg for our outdated smartphones during this year’s solar eclipse. It’s a shameful sight to see the once-proud organization that sent men to the moon is now reduced to soliciting cell phones from the public just to carry out basic astronomical observations. I guess that’s what happens when Democrats get their grubby little hands on things - they turn them into inefficient messes. How absurd that these rocket scientists can’t manage a simple observation without relying on citizens’ phones!

  • Victor@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This image highlights Baily’s deads

    lol, I’m not trying to pick on someone with dyslexia but this was a pretty funny typo.

  • Victor@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    A rotating spheroid will oblate when its centrifugal force generates enough inertia to slightly flatten it out into a more irregular, elliptical shape.

    I didn’t know inertia could be generated. I thought mass just had inertia. Could someone explain? Are they talking out of their ass or is that statement actually accurate?

    • prashanthvsdvn@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      They are talking about Moment of Inertia. Inertia wrt to rotation changes with how they are positioned in reference to the spinning axis. Think slender bodies are easier to rotate compared to wider bodies with same mass. That’s what they mean when earth slightly flattens out its becoming less slender and more difficult to rotate

    • mlg@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I think whoever wrote it just used the wrong word because yes inertia is dependent on mass, not momentum

      Okay I actually decided to check and I think it just a poorly written explanation of rotational inertia

      A rotating spheroid will oblate when its centrifugal force generates enough ~~inertia ~~ angular momentum to slightly flatten it out into a more irregular, elliptical shape.

      If the shape also changes, this would mean distribution of that mass relative to the axis of rotation would also have changed, which if I’m reading this right, affects rotational inertia.

    • ShaunaTheDead@fedia.io
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      8 months ago

      Inertia is the tendency of objects in motion to stay in motion, and objects at rest to stay at rest, unless a force causes its speed or direction to change. from Wikipedia

      So they’re kind of just saying that once it picks up enough rotational speed.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Thank you! I appreciate it. I had a hunch they were sloppy with the term “inertia”, and this confirms it for me, assuming I’m understanding it correctly.