Monday Night Open Thread

I started watching that alternate history program on Apple TV+ “For All Mankind.” I’ve only watched one episode, but I’m not certain I’ll watch more. It’s technically well-done, but I’m not sure I care for the storyline, at least so far.

Maybe I’m old-fashioned, but I’m not certain how any alternate history of the space race could make for a better story than what really happened.

Of course, we didn’t know back then that the Soviet Union’s space program was in such bad shape. We really became aware of it when U.S. and Soviet astronauts/cosmonauts trained together for the Apollo-Soyuz joint space flight. That flight didn’t have the glamor of Apollo 11, nor the suspense of Apollo 13, but it did help fulfill the promise of Apollo 11: venturing into space, in peace, for all mankind.

[The YouTube]

Do you have something you’d like to share? A link? A joke? Some words of wisdom? A topic to discuss? It’s Monday Night Open Thread.

What’s on your mind?

Frozen II: The Search for Zzyzx

Despite Holiday Cold Snap, 2019 Is ‘Virtually Certain’ To Be Warmest Year on Record for Alaska
KTOO.org | 12/27/2019 | Wesley Early

Much of Alaska had been frigid this holiday week as temperatures across the state dipped as low as minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s in stark contrast to a year with record high temperatures and major disruptions of traditionally solid sea ice across the Arctic.

Temperatures in the Northwest Arctic villages of Ambler and Buckland reached 42 degrees below zero on the morning of Dec. 26. The Interior village of Allakaket had the coldest temperature in the state on Dec. 26 at minus 56 degrees. Friday, Dec. 27, saw a low of minus 65 degrees in Manley Hot Springs near Eureka, one of the lowest temperatures for anywhere in Alaska in years.

“Chill and enjoy this Warmest Year on Record, OK?”

(Or should that be “Warmist Year on Record”?)

Rick Thoman, a climatologist with the International Arctic Research Center in Fairbanks, says though it’s a dramatic drop from this winter’s balmy start, the weather pattern is normal for this time of year.

Sleight of hand. . . .

The weather pattern (lower temperatures) is normal for this time of year because it’s — you know — winter.

The actual temperatures are abnormally low.

“We’ve just gotten so accustomed to these persistent runs of above normal weather that even somewhat below normal for more than a day or two really seems outstanding,” Thoman said.

In sum, somewhat-above-normal temperatures are significant; historically-below-normal temperatures are not. You silly people running around talking about below-normal temperatures. . . . Learn to cold!


Ah, Well . . .

Rogue Star HIP 85605 on Collision Course With Our Solar System, But Earthlings Need Not Worry
by Matt Williams, Universe Today / phys.org / 1/5/2015

Our Solar System is due for a near-collision with HIP 85605, a star 16 light-years away, in roughly 240,000 years. Credit: Dana Berry, SkyWorks Digital, Inc.

It’s known as HIP 85605, one of two stars that make up a binary in the Hercules constellation roughly 16 light years away. And if a recent research paper produced by Dr. Coryn Bailer-Jones of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany is correct, it is on a collision course with our Solar System.

🙁

Now for the good news: according to Bailer-Jones’ calculations, the star will pass by our Solar System at a distance of 0.04 parsecs, which is equivalent to 8,000 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun (8,000 AUs).

Still rates pretty high on the sadz meter.
🙁

In addition, this passage will not affect Earth or any other planet’s orbit around the Sun. And perhaps most importantly of all, none of it will be happening for another 240,000 to 470,000 years from now.

… so, just about the time this impeachment thing winds up?

“Even though the galaxy contains very many stars,” Bailor-Jones told Universe Today via email, “the spaces between them are huge. So even over the (long) life of our galaxy so far, the probability of any two stars have actually collided — as opposed to just coming close — is extremely small.”

However, in astronomical terms, that still counts as a near-miss. In a universe that is 46 billion light years in any direction – and that’s just the observable part of it – an event that is expected to take place just 50 light days away is considered to be pretty close. And in the context of space and time, a quarter of a million to half a million years is the very near future.

… but, um, — how to put this delicately?
None of us will be around to see it.

The real concern is the effect that the passage of HIP 85605 could have on the Oort Cloud – the massive cloud of icy planetesimals that surrounds the Solar System. Given that its distance is between 20,000 and 50,000 AU from our Sun, HIP 85605 would actually move through the Oort cloud and cause serious disruption.

Have we considered deploying some Norwegian scold with pigtails? The Swedish girl obviously isn’t working.

“. . . . he predicts that HIP 85605 has a 90% chance of passing within a single parsec of our Sun in the next 240 to 470 thousand years. However, he also admits that if the astronomy is incorrect, the next closest encounter won’t be happening for another 1.3 million years, when a K7 dwarf known as GL 710 is predicted to pass within 0.10 – 0.44 parsecs.”

Whoo-hoo! That’s one heck of a Kessel run!


Straight Line of the Day: Joe Biden? What Could We Possibly Ask Him That We Don’t Already Know?

Biden Caves: “I Would Obey Any Subpoena That Was Sent to Me” for Trump Impeachment Trial
Gateway Pundit | Dec 28, 2019

Tough-talking Joe Biden, the former vice president leading the race for the Democrat’s presidential nomination, reversed his defiant stance from just 24 hours ago that he would defy any subpoena issued by the Senate to compel his testimony in President Trump’s looming impeachment trial, telling a Fairfield, Iowa, audience Saturday night, “I would obey any subpoena that was sent to me.”

Straight Line of the Day: Joe Biden? What could we possibly ask him that we don’t already know?


SCOTUS Nightmare

Now word is that Joe Biden would nominate Barack Obama to the Supreme Court if he’s elected president.

Ain’t that a helluva way to start the week, with that bit of nonsense? Imagine the president with the most Supreme Court losses sitting on that body.

Just when you thought Democrats couldn’t get any worse, they suggest something like this.

I assume no one is wondering why I swore off of voting for Democrats many many years ago.