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If you had to make a model of the solar system in an elementary science class, your nine planets (or eight, depending on your age) were likely perfect foam spheres. While that’s a pretty good approximation, it’s not entirely accurate. The Earth is actually an irregularly shaped ellipsoid — its middle bulges due to the centrifugal force of its constant rotation. Scientists have determined that the Earth’s sea level is actually about 13 miles farther from its center at the equator than at the poles. Plus, the Earth’s shape is constantly changing.
jusplay4fun wrote:The Earth Isn’t a Perfect SphereIf you had to make a model of the solar system in an elementary science class, your nine planets (or eight, depending on your age) were likely perfect foam spheres. While that’s a pretty good approximation, it’s not entirely accurate. The Earth is actually an irregularly shaped ellipsoid — its middle bulges due to the centrifugal force of its constant rotation. Scientists have determined that the Earth’s sea level is actually about 13 miles farther from its center at the equator than at the poles. Plus, the Earth’s shape is constantly changing.
jimboston wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:The Earth Isn’t a Perfect SphereIf you had to make a model of the solar system in an elementary science class, your nine planets (or eight, depending on your age) were likely perfect foam spheres. While that’s a pretty good approximation, it’s not entirely accurate. The Earth is actually an irregularly shaped ellipsoid — its middle bulges due to the centrifugal force of its constant rotation. Scientists have determined that the Earth’s sea level is actually about 13 miles farther from its center at the equator than at the poles. Plus, the Earth’s shape is constantly changing.
Another post where JP4 shares a link and info to common knowledge we all learned in 3rd grade.
jusplay4fun wrote:jimboston wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:The Earth Isn’t a Perfect SphereIf you had to make a model of the solar system in an elementary science class, your nine planets (or eight, depending on your age) were likely perfect foam spheres. While that’s a pretty good approximation, it’s not entirely accurate. The Earth is actually an irregularly shaped ellipsoid — its middle bulges due to the centrifugal force of its constant rotation. Scientists have determined that the Earth’s sea level is actually about 13 miles farther from its center at the equator than at the poles. Plus, the Earth’s shape is constantly changing.
Another post where JP4 shares a link and info to common knowledge we all learned in 3rd grade.
Please show us what else you know about this topic BEFORE I post something.
Maxleod wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:jimboston wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:The Earth Isn’t a Perfect SphereIf you had to make a model of the solar system in an elementary science class, your nine planets (or eight, depending on your age) were likely perfect foam spheres. While that’s a pretty good approximation, it’s not entirely accurate. The Earth is actually an irregularly shaped ellipsoid — its middle bulges due to the centrifugal force of its constant rotation. Scientists have determined that the Earth’s sea level is actually about 13 miles farther from its center at the equator than at the poles. Plus, the Earth’s shape is constantly changing.
Another post where JP4 shares a link and info to common knowledge we all learned in 3rd grade.
Please show us what else you know about this topic BEFORE I post something.
I'm not Jimboston, but your quote says it's because of the "centrifugal force of its constant rotation".
I thought it was because of Earth's magnetic poles?
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Dukasaur wrote:For as long as Betelgeuse has been discussed in the news, it has always been said that it will probably go supernova within 10,000 years.
A new paper published just last week, however, puts for the proposition that Betelgeuse is in the late stages of carbon compression, and could go supernova on a time scale of tens, not thousands of years. That means, with a bit of luck, I could see it in my lifetime.
https://earthsky.org/brightest-stars/betelgeuse-will-explode-someday/
Probably the most exciting news in astronomy in years! We could live to see a supernova!
‘It’s new territory’: why is Betelgeuse glowing so brightly and behaving so strangely?
After the ‘great dimming’, the closest red supergiant star to Earth is pulsating twice as fast as usual and lighting up the southern hemisphere’s early evening sky
Helen Sullivan
Thu 25 May 2023 23.52 EDT
One of the brightest stars in the sky is behaving strangely, pulsating from bright to dim twice as fast as usual and giving scientists an unprecedented insight into how stars die.
Betelgeuse, the closest red supergiant to Earth, has long been understood to move between brighter and dimmer in 400-day cycles. But from late 2019 to early 2020, it underwent what astrophysicists called “the great dimming”, as a dust cloud obscured our view of the star.
Now, it is glowing at 150% of its normal brightness, and is cycling between brighter and dimmer at 200-day intervals – twice as fast as usual – according to astrophysicist Andrea Dupree of the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics. It is currently the seventh brightest star in the night sky – up three places from its usual tenth brightest.
Betelgeuse in the night sky
At mid-northern latitudes, around the first of every year, Betelgeuse rises around sunset. The star is prominent on January and February evenings.
By the beginning of March, this star is due south in early evening. By mid-May, it is briefly visible in the west after sunset. Betelgeuse is traveling behind the sun in early summer, but it returns to the east before dawn by about mid- to late July. Certainly, by early August, you can see Betelgeuse in Orion in the east before sunrise, where the constellation is known as the ghost of the summer dawn.
The star Betelgeuse has a distinctive muted orange-red color. It’s ideal for convincing non-believers that stars do, in fact, come in colors.
Stars designated as Alpha are typically brightest in their constellations. But Betelgeuse is Alpha Orionis, despite the fact that it’s fainter than Orion’s other bright star, Rigel.
Betelgeuse is the 10th-brightest star in the sky overall, and it’s the 7th-brightest star visible from most of the U.S., Canada, Europe and the majority of the Northern Hemisphere.
ConfederateSS wrote:--------------Last night, from the haze caused by The Canadian wild fires in the east....The haze reached Detroit/Windsor.....But more in the sky....The Moon was orange, because of the haze....It looked like a Harvest Moon in the Fall...But not as big....Kool though...See tonight if it is still orange...... ConfederateSS.out!(The Blue and Silver Rebellion)...
ConfederateSS wrote:ConfederateSS wrote:--------------Last night, from the haze caused by The Canadian wild fires in the east....The haze reached Detroit/Windsor.....But more in the sky....The Moon was orange, because of the haze....It looked like a Harvest Moon in the Fall...But not as big....Kool though...See tonight if it is still orange...... ConfederateSS.out!(The Blue and Silver Rebellion)...
--------- The haze is still there on the Moon(well the sky)...tonight....... ConfederateSS.out!(The Blue and Silver Rebellion)...
EKING OUT OBSERVING FROM UNDER WILDFIRE SMOKE
BY: BOB KING JUNE 14, 2023
Smoke from Canadian wildfires has made observing the night sky a challenge for many. Here are some ways you can make the best of a bad situation.
THURSDAY, JUNE 29
■ The Moon tonight shines about two thirds of the way from Spica, way off on its right, to Antares waiting for it on its left.
FRIDAY, JUNE 30
■ The Moon shines among the stars of upper Scorpius. The brightest of these is orange Antares about 2° or 3° to the Moon's lower left (for North America). Next brightest is Delta Scorpii, farther to the Moon's upper right. Binoculars help through the moonlight and summer haze.
■ Mars and Venus are now at their minimum separation for this apparition, 3.6° apart, as shown below. Mars will remain in low twilight view for more than a month to come. Venus will drop away faster.
GaryDenton wrote:We will have a close-up view of a supernova, perhaps very soon. It depends on how big that star actually is.
https://www.inverse.com/science/study-says-betelgeuse-might-explode-soon-but-astronomers-disagree
saxitoxin wrote:Serbia is a RUDE DUDE
may not be a PRUDE, but he's gotta 'TUDE
might not be LEWD, but he's gonna get BOOED
RUDE
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