What the Heck?! Thread (Closed)

Status
Not open for further replies.

Yvrch

Junior Member
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Imagine we happen to find an intelligent life form who understands escape velocity and space travel. I'm all for science and reason, but please don't venture out to contact them if they are indeed aliens.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

The Most Mysterious Star in Our Galaxy
Astronomers have spotted a strange mess of objects whirling around a distant star. Scientists who search for extraterrestrial civilizations are scrambling to get a closer look.

lead_960.jpg

Kevin Morefield





  • In the Northern hemisphere’s sky, hovering above the Milky Way, there are two constellations—Cygnus the swan, her wings outstretched in full flight, and Lyra, the harp that accompanied poetry in ancient Greece, from which we take our word “lyric.”

    Between these constellations sits an unusual star, invisible to the naked eye, but visible to the
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    , which stared at it for more than four years, beginning in 2009.
    “We’d never seen anything like this star,” says Tabetha Boyajian, a postdoc at Yale. “It was really weird. We thought it might be bad data or movement on the spacecraft, but everything checked out.”

    Kepler was looking for tiny dips in the light emitted by this star. Indeed, it was looking for these dips in more than 150,000 stars, simultaneously, because these dips are often shadows cast by transiting planets. Especially when they repeat, periodically, as you’d expect if they were caused by orbiting objects.

    The Kepler Space Telescope collected a great deal of light from all of those stars it watched. So much light that Kepler’s science team couldn’t process it all with algorithms. They needed the human eye, and human cognition, which remains unsurpassed in certain sorts of pattern recognition. Kepler’s astronomers decided to found
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    , a program that asked “citizen scientists” to examine light patterns emitted by the stars, from the comfort of their own homes.

    In 2011, several citizen scientists flagged one particular star as “interesting” and “bizarre.” The star was emitting a light pattern that looked stranger than any of the others Kepler was watching.

    The light pattern suggests there is a big mess of matter circling the star, in tight formation. That would be expected if the star were young. When our solar system first formed, four and a half billion years ago, a messy disk of dust and debris surrounded the sun, before gravity organized it into planets, and rings of rock and ice.

    But this unusual star isn’t young. If it were young, it would be surrounded by dust that would give off extra infrared light. There doesn’t seem to be an excess of infrared light around this star.

    It appears to be mature.

    And yet, there is this mess of objects circling it. A mess big enough to block a substantial number of photons that would have otherwise beamed into the tube of the Kepler Space Telescope. If blind nature deposited this mess around the star, it must have done so recently. Otherwise, it would be gone by now. Gravity would have consolidated it, or it would have been sucked into the star and swallowed, after a brief fiery splash.

    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    describing the star’s bizarre light pattern. Several of the citizen scientists are named as co-authors. The paper explores a number of scenarios that might explain the pattern—instrument defects; the shrapnel from an asteroid belt pileup; an impact of planetary scale, like the one that created our moon.

    The paper finds each explanation wanting, save for one. If another star had passed through the unusual star’s system, it could have yanked a sea of comets inward. Provided there were enough of them, the comets could have made the dimming pattern.

    But that would be an extraordinary coincidence, if that happened so recently, only a few millennia before humans developed the tech to loft a telescope into space. That’s a narrow band of time, cosmically speaking.

    And yet, the explanation has to be rare or coincidental. After all, this light pattern doesn’t show up anywhere else, across 150,000 stars. We know that something strange is going on out there.

    When I spoke to Boyajian on the phone, she explained that her recent paper only reviews “natural” scenarios. “But,” she said, there were “other scenarios” she was considering.

    Jason Wright, an astronomer from Penn State University, is set to publish an alternative interpretation of the light pattern. SETI researchers have long suggested that we might be able to detect distant extraterrestrial civilizations, by looking for enormous technological artifacts orbiting other stars. Wright and his co-authors say the unusual star’s light pattern is consistent with a “swarm of megastructures,” perhaps stellar-light collectors, technology designed to catch energy from the star.

    “When [Boyajian] showed me the data, I was fascinated by how crazy it looked,” Wright told me. “Aliens should always be the very last hypothesis you consider, but this looked like something you would expect an alien civilization to build.”

    Boyajian is now working with Wright and Andrew Siemion, the Director of the SETI Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley. The three of them are writing up a proposal. They want to point a massive radio dish at the unusual star, to see if it emits radio waves at frequencies associated with technological activity.

    If they see a sizable amount of radio waves, they’ll follow up with the Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico, which may be able to say whether the radio waves were emitted by a technological source, like those that waft out into the universe from Earth’s network of radio stations.

    Assuming all goes well, the first observation would take place in January, with the follow-up coming next fall. If things go really well, the follow-up could happen sooner. “If we saw something exciting, we could ask the director for special allotted time on the VLA,” Wright told me. “And in that case, we’d be asking to go on right away.”

    In the meantime, Boyajian, Siemion, Wright, the citizen scientists, and the rest of us, will have to content ourselves with longing looks at the sky, aimed between the swan and the lyre, where maybe, just maybe, someone is looking back, and seeing the sun dim ever so slightly, every 365 days.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

broadsword

Brigadier
Boyajian is now working with Wright and Andrew Siemion, the Director of the SETI Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley. The three of them are writing up a proposal. They want to point a massive radio dish at the unusual star, to see if it emits radio waves at frequencies associated with technological activity.

If they see a sizable amount of radio waves, they’ll follow up with the Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico, which may be able to say whether the radio waves were emitted by a technological source, like those that waft out into the universe from Earth’s network of radio stations.

China's own FAST telescope will find itself a useful task when it becomes operational.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Not sure how the Western media can believe they have some ounce of integrity and professionalism above everyone else. This article is basically... nothing. There are garbage articles out there that are just filler but this brings it to a whole new level. They're asking readers to find the story for them. First I thought it was just plain ignorance of people who believe Chinese factories are dungeons and workers are chained to their stations. Is it really a big deal to find footage of what's going on in a Chinese factory? Then you read the comments and the author of this article is really asking readers who are "trained" eyes to spot something for him. Why? Because they forgot to delete the footage therefore it's uncensored because every factory in China is hiding something? The author probably had to think of a story that would get a lot of views so he can keep his job. This is the era of opinion news where journalists now gear stories to "confirm" to their audience what the already want to believe. Now the public can write their own stories.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Guys, this thread is about strange news that does not fit on other threads and is out of the ordinary.

It is not a forum for former political injustices or travesty.

Many of those are, by SD Rules out of bounds anyway. (ie. Tiananmen Square Massacre, Comfort Women from WW II, etc., etc).

It is also not a place to squeeze in comments that should be on other threads.

It is not a place where SD Rules violation is somehow, "okay."

Be careful...if these thing go too far, the thread will be closed.

DO NOT RESPND TO THIS MODERATION.


WalkingTall3.jpg
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Mods can remove this at their discretion.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


AUSTIN - Hundreds of students at the University of Texas at Austin will protest a new law that will allow more guns on campus not with signs or sit-ins, but by "strapping gigantic swinging dildos to our backpacks."

Their mantra? #CocksNotGlocks

Jessica Jin, who set up the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
on Facebook, invokes the argument that allowing more guns on campus will make students safe is a fallacy. She's urging students to send campus leaders that message by strapping on the plastic phalluses.

RELATED:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"'You're carrying a gun to class? Yeah well I'm carrying a HUGE DILDO,'" Jin says in the group's description. "Just about as effective at protecting us from sociopathic shooters, but much safer for recreational play."

More than 4,100 people had signed up to participate by Monday morning. The "strap in" will occur on Aug. 24, 2016, the first day of next year's fall semester.

The event was created the same day one student was killed and another wounded
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
at Texas Southern University, and just days after other deadly shootings on campuses in Oregon and Arizona.

Pro-campus carry advocates have said allowing concealed handguns on campus will enable people to defend themselves in the event of a live shooter, while those against it say it makes little difference and could even add to the chaos.

Gov. Greg Abbott signed Senate Bill 11, the campus carry law, in June. Starting in August 2016, the law will allow properly-licensed firearms owners to carry concealed handguns into most buildings on campus. The law also gives a certain amount of latitude to campus presidents, however, to designate so-called "gun-free zones."

At
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
held in the last month, dozens of UT-Austin students, faculty and staff spoke against the law, urging President Greg Fenves to severely limit campus carry at the flagship. Last week, a professor emeritus in the school's economic department
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
up teaching over concerns about his personal safety.

Campus carry does not apply to private schools, and doesn't go into effect for community colleges until August 2017.

But the day it does for Longhorns, concealed carry license holders might not be the only one's packing heat on campus. Jin could not be reached for comment Saturday morning, but the San Antonio native and violin performance major encouraged widespread participation in the event.

"ANYBODY can participate in solidarity: alum, non-UT students, people outside of Texas," she wrote on the group's page. "Come one dildo, come all dildos."
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Mods can remove this at their discretion.

""You're carrying a gun to class? Yeah well I'm carrying a HUGE DILDO,'" Jin says in the group's description. "Just about as effective at protecting us from sociopathic shooters, but much safer for recreational play."

These kids have had too much to drink.

Most of the killers who are stopped early on, and before they end up killing themselves when they have killed many others, are stopped by someone else with a gun...be it a police or a civilian.

Anyhow...let's not get into the gun debate here.

I do concede that this is indeed "what the heck," news...although it borders on trending into the sexual themes we try and keep off of SD.
 

B.I.B.

Captain
These kids have had too much to drink.

Most of the killers who are stopped early on, and before they end up killing themselves when they have killed many others, are stopped by someone else with a gun...be it a police or a civilian.

Anyhow...let's not get into the gun debate here.

I do concede that this is indeed "what the heck," news...although it borders on trending into the sexual themes we try and keep off of SD.

When I was in the States, I remarked to my host on how polite American motorists were."That's because one doesn't know whose packing a gun" he replied
 

B.I.B.

Captain
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
[/QUOTE]

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Imagine we happen to find an intelligent life form who understands escape velocity and space travel. I'm all for science and reason, but please don't venture out to contact them if they are indeed aliens.



Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Yeah. Usually we will want what they got and they will want what we got and before we kow it we will have our first inter galactic war.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top