raman
Kind of a Jagger-Tarzan
But if you think about it...we shouldnt really have pitch black nights
OK if it was a serious question then the serious answer is that we don't have pitch black nights.
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But if you think about it...we shouldnt really have pitch black nights
but if the sunlight reaches all the way past earth shouldnt we have still have light...and also the reflection of shit in the atmosphere space starlight etc...Light pollution blocking the stars.
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but if the sunlight reaches all the way past earth shouldnt we have still have light...and also the reflection of shit in the atmosphere space starlight etc...
I always wanted to get a scope...maybe when I am older...You can get some excellent telescopes for around 2-3k that have attachments for SLR cameras that can take some pretty interesting photos. However they will mostly just return a blurry picture of Jupiter but you can make out features of the planet. Saturns rings for example are quite pronounced even with basic telescopes.
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Really cool shot of the international space station with jupiter during daylight hours:
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This is exactly what I thought too but then there are so many stars in pretty much every direction you look it shouldnt be any darknessYes, when you can see planets through telescopes that's the light from the sun being reflected off of them. But there needs to be something there to reflect light. Space is called space because it's largely just space.
but i guess my question is more how does 1 see jupiter how does 1 discover jupiter how do you take a picture of jupiter if it is made of a colourless transparent gas...
This is exactly what I thought too but then there are so many stars in pretty much every direction you look it shouldnt be any darkness
This is exactly what I thought too but then there are so many stars in pretty much every direction you look it shouldnt be any darkness
thats the thing scientist say it is infinate some say it isntThat would only make sense if the universe was infinite and/or had an infinite number of stars.
This is exactly what I thought too but then there are so many stars in pretty much every direction you look it shouldnt be any darkness
jupiter and uranus I believe is made of hydrogen and helium right down to the core which are both colourless and transparent if you say that it gains a spectrum because of gravity well I dont see how but I guess it plausibleYeah but the distance from earth to even the closest star is so mindboggling huge... so the light gets diffused.
On your other post, Jupiter isn't made of transparent colourless gas.. the gas has colour because it's under extreme pressure-due to gravity.. or some such.
I dunno. I didn't pay attention in science class either and that was nearly 30 years ago...
thats the thing scientist say it is infinate some say it isnt
Yeah thats probably the best answer but scientist cant agree on itThe lights just taking its time to get here
jupiter and uranus I believe is made of hydrogen and helium right down to the core which are both colourless and transparent if you say that it gains a spectrum because of gravity well I dont see how but I guess it plausible
They arent sure whether its infinate or not..notNo they don't.
dont quote me on this but 90% hydrogen the rest of the 10% is mainly helliumNo, there's ammonia and all sorts of other stuff in there as well.
More specifically, because the universe is finitely old and the speed of light is finite, only finitely many stars can be observed within a given volume of space visible from Earth. The density of stars within this finite volume is sufficiently low that any line of sight from Earth is unlikely to reach a star.
This paradox is explained by the fact that the Big Bang theory also involves the expansion of space which can cause the energy of emitted light to be reduced via redshift
dont quote me on this but 90% hydrogen the rest of the 10% is mainly hellium
Also the big bang is not proven
I always wanted to get a scope...maybe when I am older...
but i guess my question is more how does 1 see jupiter how does 1 discover jupiter how do you take a picture of jupiter if it is made of a colourless transparent gas...
I could understand that gravitational pull could lead to a discovery but photos etc