Posts Tagged ‘Cool’

Elsewhere for November 17th

Monday, November 17th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 17th:

Elsewhere for November 14th

Friday, November 14th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 14th:

  • A Better Place for a Banff Canoe Ride - Yeah, that's not bad. I'd go there, probably be pretty OK.
  • The world's most super-designed data center – fit for a James Bond villain - This underground data center has greenhouses, waterfalls, German submarine engines, simulated daylight and can withstand a hit from a hydrogen bomb. A newly opened high-security data center run by one of Sweden’s largest ISPs, located in an old nuclear bunker deep below the bedrock of Stockholm city, sealed off from the world by entrance doors 40 cm thick (almost 16 inches).
  • Amazing Home.. - I LOVE this house. LOVE it. I love the sheer wilderness. The Views. The stark simplicity.

Viewing other planets.

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Two groups of astronomers have taken the first pictures of planets going around other stars.   This is just astounding.  We’re now able to view OTHER PLANETS.  This just makes me giddy. 

Dr. Christian Marois is with a team from the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics in Victoria, British Columbia that recorded three planets circling a star (HR 8799) that is 130 light-years away in the constellation Pegasus.

Paul Kalas, leading a team from UC Berkeley, photographed a planet orbiting Fomalhaut, which is 25 light-years away in the Piscis Austrinus constellation.

Granted, if you go look at the photos, they are scratchy, grainy images with little pixels jumping around.  But if you’re an astronomer, you see this and you see planets.  Kepler himself would feel right at home looking at these images. 

Now we’ve discovered 300 extrasolar planets out there, but based on indirect observation.  This is mostly done by measuring dips in starlight as the planet passes in front of it.

“Every extrasolar planet detected so far has been a wobble on a graph,” said Bruce Macintosh, an astrophysicist from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and a member of Dr. Marois’s team. “These are the first pictures of an entire system.”

These new planets are HUGE.   Just to put this into perspective, Jupiter is two and a half times larger than ALL the other planets in our solar system combined.  It’s 318 times more massive than Earth (it’s diameter is equal to 11 Earths.)  And we’re GREATLY expanding this size with these planets.  Hell, Jupiter is so big it’s barycenter is actually above the Sun’s surface. (A barycenter is the point between two objects where they balance each other. In other words, it is the center of gravity where two or more celestial bodies orbit each other.)

The three planets orbiting HR 8799 are roughly 10, 9 and 6 times the mass of Jupiter, and orbit their star in periods of 450, 180 and 100 years respectively, all counterclockwise.

The Fomalhaut planet is about three times as massive as Jupiter, according to Dr. Kalas’s calculations, and is on the inner edge of a huge band of dust, taking roughly 872 years to complete a revolution of its star.

I feel strongly that we, as a race, need to move to the stars.  We need to find other planets, other places where we can expand and grow.  These sort of studies and findings are crucial to that sort of growth.  That’s why I get so excited.

Elsewhere for November 13th

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 13th:

Elsewhere for November 12th

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 12th:

Elsewhere for November 12th

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 12th:

A Spear-fishing Orangutan.

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

Primatology.net, a new favorite site of mine, has this fantastic article on this Orangutan from Borneo.  This Orangutan is special because he’s using a tool.  Not just any tool though.  We’ve seen primates use tools before.  But this Orangutan is SPEAR-FISHING.

 

Gurd Schuster is the researcher that took this photo.  He did mention that while this orangutan learnt this method from watching fishermen along the river, he hasn’t fully mastered the skill yet.

“Although the method required too much skill for him to master, he was later able to improvise by using the pole to catch fish already trapped in the locals’ fishing lines”

I, for one, welcome our Spear-Fishing Orangutan Overlords.

Elsewhere for November 9th

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

These are my delicious links for November 9th:

Underground Fortress for sale.

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

An amazing, homemade, underground fortress is for sale.  It’s in Blaine, WA.  He built it over the course of 20 years, working it 45 feet under his house!

The fortress has over 1600 sq. ft. of living area, plus hundreds of more square feet of passages and secrets rooms. It was all hand dug over a 20 year period, and all the walls were constructed with a small electric hand cement mixer. There are 3 ft concrete walls, using 5-bag cement (20% denser than regular cement). Not only are the walls thick and dense, but the finishing work is amazing quality. These walls keep it a constant 60F degrees year round. It is so well insulated that even one small space heater can heat all 1600+ sqft of fortress space in a few hours. The fortress has amazingly fresh air in it with an incredible air ventilation system that pulls air outside and brings fresh air in, leaving no moldy or musty smell that you commonly smell in basements.

It’s listed as a two-story house with four stories underneath. Go through the photos, showing the secret doors, the many levels, the amazing finish work.  I’m stunned.  I really want to live here.

The Painting whose eyes follow you.

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Make has a great article on creating a painting whose eyes move around and watch you. (yeah, the link is busted currently, but that’s the one I have, hopefully they’ll fix it soon).  You can see more examples in their Flickr pool.  

Definitely would want one of these, so if anyone was willing to make me one, well, I wouldn’t refuse it.