Ten things you don’t know about the Earth 8 Sep 2008 Ten things you don’t know about the Earth – Phil Plait at Bad Astronomy considers the following propositions: 1) The Earth is smoother than a billiard ball. 2) The Earth is an oblate spheroid 3) The Earth isn’t an oblate spheroid 4) The Earth is not exactly aligned with its geoid 5) Jumping into hole through the Earth is like orbiting it (including, digging to China) 6) The Earth’s interior is hot due to impacts, shrinkage, sinkage, and radioactive decay 7) The Earth has at least five natural moons. But not really 8) The Earth is getting more massive 9) Mt. Everest isn’t the biggest mountain, and 10) Destroying the Earth is hard I’m particularly comforted by that last item. Guest post
General Science Even the Good Guys get it wrong! 10 Sep 200818 Sep 2017 Another guest post by Thony Christie John recently provided a link to a review of Steve Fuller’s newest book by Anthony Grayling. On the whole I find Professor Grayling’s comments excellent and applaud his put-down of Fuller but then in the last section of his review he goes and spoils… Read More
Book A book review: Merchants of Doubt 30 Aug 201024 Nov 2022 This guest review is courtesy of Richard Harter, whose own website is here. Read More
Guest post On Negation 28 Sep 2010 Jim Harrison is a regular commenter who made an important comment on my piece on Creativity. I invited him to do a guest post, and this is it, below the fold: Read More
Yay, I knew two!! #9, thanks to the BBC’s Planet Earth series. There are plenty of larger-than-everest mountains in the oceans! As for #10, I remember reading this article a while ago – Earth may be really hard to destroy, but if we ever decide to go about it, there’s your instruction manual.
I’m particularly comforted by that last item. Why? Are you planning on hanging around for a while, geologically speaking? Planet Earth is a dangerous place, nobody gets out of here alive!
I’m particularly comforted by that last item. Why? Are you planning on hanging around for a while, geologically speaking? Planet Earth is a dangerous place, nobody gets out of here alive!
Any Australian who finds something more important than sport is an enigma to me (I may not be Australian, but I have a good sense of what goes on there)….. all the more intriguing…. will check back regularly. And I have a hard time swallowing numbers 1 and 2 and 3. :o) “Lighten up, Francis.”
Re #5: Doesn’t that neglect the fact that the Earth is rotating, but that you won’t be rotating with it? Re #10: Bonus factoid, especially for those who think that relativistic effects are negligible in situations we usually encounter: What is the mass deficit represented by the gravitational binding energy of the earth? (ie. How much less does the Earth mass than all the bits would after Phil has finished destroying it?) I calculated this once, and I forget the answer except that it had a surprisingly impressive number of digits.
Re #5: Doesn’t that neglect the fact that the Earth is rotating, but that you won’t be rotating with it? Re #10: Bonus factoid, especially for those who think that relativistic effects are negligible in situations we usually encounter: What is the mass deficit represented by the gravitational binding energy of the earth? (ie. How much less does the Earth mass than all the bits would after Phil has finished destroying it?) I calculated this once, and I forget the answer except that it had a surprisingly impressive number of digits.
Re #5: Doesn’t that neglect the fact that the Earth is rotating, but that you won’t be rotating with it? Re #10: Bonus factoid, especially for those who think that relativistic effects are negligible in situations we usually encounter: What is the mass deficit represented by the gravitational binding energy of the earth? (ie. How much less does the Earth mass than all the bits would after Phil has finished destroying it?) I calculated this once, and I forget the answer except that it had a surprisingly impressive number of digits.
I notice he didn’t dare touch the “women are from Venus, men are from Mars” hypothesis. Nor did he address the fact that Earth isn’t made of earth. I’m starting to think Phil isn’t as “Bad As-” he could be!
I notice he didn’t dare touch the “women are from Venus, men are from Mars” hypothesis. Nor did he address the fact that Earth isn’t made of earth. I’m starting to think Phil isn’t as “Bad As-” he could be!
I notice he didn’t dare touch the “women are from Venus, men are from Mars” hypothesis. Nor did he address the fact that Earth isn’t made of earth. I’m starting to think Phil isn’t as “Bad As-” he could be!
#6: to be more precise, if one astronaut circles the planet at ground level (assume no atmosphere) on a meridian, and another, at the same time, jumps in a hole along the North-South diameter, then they will have the same period around the planet, and thus will be able to play chess together, one move each time they meet (at each pole alternatively).
#6: to be more precise, if one astronaut circles the planet at ground level (assume no atmosphere) on a meridian, and another, at the same time, jumps in a hole along the North-South diameter, then they will have the same period around the planet, and thus will be able to play chess together, one move each time they meet (at each pole alternatively).
#6: to be more precise, if one astronaut circles the planet at ground level (assume no atmosphere) on a meridian, and another, at the same time, jumps in a hole along the North-South diameter, then they will have the same period around the planet, and thus will be able to play chess together, one move each time they meet (at each pole alternatively).
#6: to be more precise, if one astronaut circles the planet at ground level (assume no atmosphere) on a meridian, and another, at the same time, jumps in a hole along the North-South diameter, then they will have the same period around the planet, and thus will be able to play chess together, one move each time they meet (at each pole alternatively).