Message from @rogalik

Discord ID: 559023684388388864


2019-03-23 14:31:41 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/427861399008575499/559021455501819924/IMG_20190323_034757.jpg

2019-03-23 14:32:54 UTC  

spaec.....

2019-03-23 14:33:08 UTC  

Quality dot

2019-03-23 14:35:51 UTC  

thats a jupiter actually tou can see it but

2019-03-23 14:35:54 UTC  

inb4 that was a helicopter

2019-03-23 14:35:55 UTC  

well

2019-03-23 14:35:57 UTC  

lol

2019-03-23 14:36:12 UTC  

would have to take a series and stack it

2019-03-23 14:36:18 UTC  

and still its very small so ..

2019-03-23 14:37:07 UTC  

you can see its jupiter because it got the stripes

2019-03-23 14:37:16 UTC  

anyway

2019-03-23 14:37:22 UTC  

@Cielodiluna di Bisanzio ive seen Titan : )

2019-03-23 14:37:33 UTC  

Based

2019-03-23 14:38:04 UTC  

I will explain what do I mean with this whole Titan thing. It is the largest moon of Saturn, which despite unfriendly conditions for biological life as we know it, may in the future be the major industrial and computing centre of the Solar System. It is also one of the richest reservoirs of readily available nitrogen, hydrogen and hydrocarbons, goods relatevily scarce in the Inner Solar System, and of which huge quantities will be needed to build artificial living spaces resembling the Earth. Therefore, Titan might be one of the major nodes of the future Sol trade network. But, paradoxically, the most important resource of Titan may be its extremely low temperature. The average temperature on the surface of the moon is about 98.3 Kelvin, compared to 228 Kelvin on Earth. This means that the very same thermal engine on Titan can achieve up to 3x higher efficiency than on Earth. Low temperature also allows you to achieve much more computing power. Due to the Landauer principle, switching one bit on Titan requires providing energy of just one zeptojule, that is, a processor with a clock frequency of 1 GHz, could work with a one billionth of a Watt. It can be assumed that Titan's energy budget, allowing the moon's temperature to remain at a relatively constant level, is 31 trillion watts. If the computers use only one of these trillions, it allows for a quadrillion GHz CPU. It is commonly assumed that from about 10 to 100 million GHz is enough to emulate the human brain. So, using only a few percent of Titan's energy budget, you could operate a supercomputer capable of emulating all of today's humanity, a million times over.

2019-03-23 14:38:24 UTC  

Daily reminder

2019-03-23 14:38:35 UTC  

barely visible tho

2019-03-23 14:38:43 UTC  

<:sadcade:550417159356940298>

2019-03-23 14:39:47 UTC  

all of the galilean moons perfectly visible tho

2019-03-23 14:39:54 UTC  

>inb4 that was a helicopter
in poland?

2019-03-23 14:40:24 UTC  

havent seen the red spot tho 👺

2019-03-23 14:40:32 UTC  

gay

2019-03-23 14:40:45 UTC  

👺

2019-03-23 14:40:56 UTC  

what if we are all just spots in the universe

2019-03-23 14:41:03 UTC  

<:thonking:318673885497262091>

2019-03-23 14:41:04 UTC  

Deep

2019-03-23 14:41:08 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/427861399008575499/559023835354103809/PIA22946-Jupiter-RedSpot-JunoSpacecraft-20190321.png

2019-03-23 14:41:53 UTC  

daily reminder that the universe jut pretends to be 3d, we're actually a 2d projection on the boundary of some black hole

2019-03-23 14:41:54 UTC  

that's that one vortex that is thousands of years old right?

2019-03-23 14:42:05 UTC  

its hundreds of years old

2019-03-23 14:43:24 UTC  

and its dying

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/427861399008575499/559024404789461012/Jupiter-panel-1879-2014-comp.png

2019-03-23 14:43:34 UTC  

3d is a visual construct made in our brain

2019-03-23 14:43:38 UTC  

everything is in 1 dimension

2019-03-23 14:44:42 UTC  

my gf is in fucking 0 dimensions

2019-03-23 14:44:52 UTC  

oh god

2019-03-23 14:44:54 UTC  

I'm more curious about the context in which that photo(?) on the left was taken

2019-03-23 14:45:05 UTC  

context?

2019-03-23 14:45:09 UTC  

what are you talking about

2019-03-23 14:45:15 UTC  

like, who made it, by what means

2019-03-23 14:45:16 UTC  

someone took a photo thats the context

2019-03-23 14:45:21 UTC  

im curious too tbh

2019-03-23 14:45:23 UTC  

>1879