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Thank you, the page you sourced references a 2024 paper inspired by the Oppenheimer movie that was super interesting to read
Thank you, the page you sourced references a 2024 paper inspired by the Oppenheimer movie that was super interesting to read
I don’t know what chain reaction exactly they were thinking of, but from modern fusion research, I believe we can confidently say that the atmosphere would need to be interior-of-a-large-star-level dense, and even then I’m not sure you’d get nitrogen fusing with anything without a lot of hydrogen or helium around. Nitrogen-nitrogen fusion seems extremely implausible for sure
Yeah I would say that one could explain the picture here
Ultimately, the phenomenon is happening much much higher up in the atmosphere, so being a few kilometers closer vertically won’t make a difference; but by being further up on the ground, you could see an aurora from further away and through a lot more molecules that could scatter non-red light
That’s a cool photo, thanks for sharing.
For more context why this wouldn’t be related to redshift, redshift is a concept in physics for light that’s analogous to the Doppler shift for sound. The typical example of Doppler shift is the EEEEE-OO-UUUUUM sound a car makes when moving fast past you. When the car is speeding away from you, the sound pitch is noticeably lower
Similarly, when a light emitter moves away from you at extremely fast speeds (i.e. hundreds of millions of meters or yards per second), the light you see reaching you will be shifted down in frequency, towards red in visible light. This can happen in other more complicated relativistic situations too but they are less easy to explain and also not applicable here
I don’t know why the people in the photo see this beautiful red aurora but redshift is almost certainly not a related concept here
The answer is almost certainly no but I’m curious why you think this might be the case
Oh I see; I knew they stopped supporting it after a while but I thought the official app was a descendent of that codebase
The comparison is even more apt when you remember that the official Reddit app also used to be great and the most popular 3rd-party app called AlienBlue, which was purchased from 1 guy and rebranded a decade ago.
It’s pretty clear that the reason why the official Reddit app isn’t good is because a good experience for their users isn’t their goal.
In Canada, they typically pick one or two last names out of four for the kid. Some adults decide to go by just one of their last names too
I like how it has really vague boundaries that are obviously approximate but then it pretends to do precise gerrymandering-type carveouts in the second map
Chickpea curry is made entirely with pantry items and is very delicious. You can throw in non-pantry items if you have them but they are not necessary
https://www.thepioneerwoman.com/food-cooking/recipes/a57629/chickpea-curry/
Spam musubi is a popular snack in Hawaii that’s also entirely pantry food. I love spam but not everyone does; if you want pantry meals though chances are you would be okay with it.
https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/49785/spam-musubi/
Obviously canned soups are a good pantry meal source, no special recipe there
Flaked ham or tuna cans with Mayo & relish (or chopped celery if you have them) are delicious to eat on any type of crackers
https://www.food.com/recipe/simple-ham-spread-397918
That’s what I can think of for now haha
There’s also the zoom filter “Low Light” that can be combined with it for even dimmer brightness
You can, although probably should not, use semicolons; they can be used to join related statements that could, very frequently, also stand on their own.
I guess the symbols aren’t standard? The ones on the bottom table don’t match with the ones in the tree
Getting books from the library to read?