Recent comments in /f/space
Toadfinger t1_j6wa29k wrote
This right here:
https://www.space.com/36800-five-ways-to-die-on-mars.html
It's scary because of how many people want to give it a go anyway.
HotCarlWithaK t1_j6w9yww wrote
Reply to comment by wasnt_a_fluke in Have you ever thought how/what it would look like to wander through space forever? by Twidom
I’m slow, how is the sleep of light instantaneous? I thought light can only travel at… we’ll… the speed of light.
Take the andromeda galaxy for example, It’s 2.5 million light years away so I thought light takes 2.5 million years to travel to us.
Even if we could travel at the speed of light wouldn’t it take 2.5 million years to get there?
woozzzzie t1_j6w83fw wrote
Reply to comment by NoRoom2dark in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
Which one?
[deleted] t1_j6w7sw7 wrote
Reply to Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery by Ok_Copy5217
[removed]
TheMurku t1_j6w7qxy wrote
Reply to comment by StygaiAsshai in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
Why would we need to ship it?
Hydrogen + Carbon Dioxide put through the Sabatier process produce Water and Methane.
[deleted] t1_j6w7oo4 wrote
Reply to comment by AWizard13 in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
[removed]
space-ModTeam t1_j6w78ic wrote
Reply to I’m on the east coast of USA (MD REP) and want to see the green beast, comet E3, tonight. I was told to look north anyone able to pinpoint where in the sky 🤣 by ceedeeze
Hello u/ceedeeze, your submission "I’m on the east coast of USA (MD REP) and want to see the green beast, comet E3, tonight. I was told to look north anyone able to pinpoint where in the sky 🤣" has been removed from r/space because:
- Such questions should be asked in the "All space questions" thread stickied at the top of the sub.
Please read the rules in the sidebar and check r/space for duplicate submissions before posting. If you have any questions about this removal please message the r/space moderators. Thank you.
[deleted] t1_j6w77j2 wrote
Reply to comment by _RolandDeschain_ in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
[removed]
Medium-Aardvark338 t1_j6w5kiz wrote
Reply to Have you ever thought how/what it would look like to wander through space forever? by Twidom
What would it be like to drift into a Black Hole?
sintos-compa t1_j6w4xmd wrote
That uniform is like something a Chinese factory would produce if they got a contract to design and manufacture “US Space Force Halloween Costumes”
_RolandDeschain_ t1_j6w4tl5 wrote
Reply to comment by Galmir_it in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
I love that this is here.
Mi pochuye to
pauloh1998 t1_j6w4g2i wrote
Reply to comment by daveomatic in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
I was just preparared to make a The Expanse reference about Ganymede lol
You beat me bosmang
Galmir_it t1_j6w2h5e wrote
Reply to comment by sendasalami2yoboi in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
You inyalowda always want something from us, ke?
BenjaminaAU t1_j6w1ygn wrote
Reply to Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery by Ok_Copy5217
'Collins, who died in 2021 at age 90, was the first person to orbit the moon solo'
Apollo X CM pilot John Young: "Am I a joke to you?"
Bare425 t1_j6w1l88 wrote
Reply to Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery by Ok_Copy5217
I know his name because of Norm Mcdonald. He went all the way to the moon then couldn't step down the rope ladder.
[deleted] t1_j6vzepr wrote
Reply to Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
[removed]
WinteryToast22 t1_j6vxns0 wrote
Reply to comment by ATSTlover in To Protect Satellites, Secure Your Networks, Chief of Space Ops Says by Corbulo2526
The entirety of the space force uses the delta motif far too much. The cap is just the most blatant example
aaahhhhhhfine t1_j6vx5al wrote
Reply to comment by isleepinahammock in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
Alright... You sold me!
Let's send some shit to Titan!
StygaiAsshai t1_j6vvoco wrote
Reply to comment by Benjilator in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
Maybe in the future we can use that instead of taking water from Earth for space exploration supplies.
isleepinahammock t1_j6vuulr wrote
Reply to comment by Blazin_Rathalos in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
Titan's surface seas actually interest me a lot more than the water oceans of the ice shell moons. This is for a couple of reasons. First, they're a lot more accessible. You don't need a probe capable enough to land, drill/melt through miles of ice, etc. You can plop down directly in them from space and start exploring. They're exposed directly to the atmosphere.
But that's not the real reason I'm interested in Titan's hydrocarbon seas. People have come up with speculative models for life that could actually exist in this environment. I'm not talking about microbes hiding out in the liquid water mantle of Titan, I'm talking exotic life that actually uses methane or ethane as its solvent, as Earth life uses water. Biologists have proposed models for such life forms and how their biochemistry could work.
Why is this so interesting? For one, it would just be a really neat discovery; it would prove that our type of life isn't the only type of life possible. But it goes much deeper than that.
Let's say we find some microbes in the waters of Europa or hiding in a briny aquifer in Mars. That would be a neat discovery, but we'll quickly run into a problem; how do we know that this life truly represents a second case of abiogenesis? In other words, how do we know that the microbes or other life we find is actually a truly unique instance of life? If panspermia is in play, then it's entirely possible that life originated on Earth and then was transferred to the other bodies in the Solar System. Or, life could have originated somewhere else and been transferred here. We have examples of Martian meteorites on Earth; we know that the various planets have all contaminated each other with some of their surface rocks. It's hotly debated whether microbes or their more durable spores could survive being launched into space by an asteroid, drifting for years in the vacuum, and then survive crashing onto another planet or moon. But the important part is that is a possibility. It's by no means proven, but it's not an unreasonable hypothesis.
If we find these microbes on Mars, biologists will immediately try to sequence their genomes and see if there is a common ancestor with Earth life. But the big problem is that ambiguity will still exist. We can't for sure know what kind of microbes existed on the early Earth. Even if the life we find seems to be evolutionarily distinct from Earth life, there will always be a possibility that the microbes we find are simply descended from a now-extinct branch of Earth life. Especially if it largely uses the same chemical elements as Earth life, whether such life is truly a second genesis will remain ambiguous. Biologists will debate the topic for generations, arguing for this reason or that reason why Earth life and Mars life do or do not have a common ancestor. We may never get a firm answer.
And this answer matters because what I'm ultimately most curious about is how common life is in the universe. If life on Mars and Earth share a common ancestor, we just go from only knowing that one planet has life to only knowing that one solar system has life. We could just be from one freakishly lucky solar system that happened to have an abiogenesis event, and almost every star in the sky is orbited by completely dead worlds. However, if we had clear evidence that two genesis events happened in one solar system, it would mean life is everywhere. Life cannot be incredibly rare if there are two independent occurrences of it in just our star system.
And that's where the potential of Titan's seas really shines. It may be possible for life to exist in Titan's seas, but it would have to be, from the molecular level up, constructed completely differently from every life form on Earth. I've heard it eloquently describe that, "such life would be as different from us as a stone fish is from a stone." There is zero chance that a microbe that uses methane or ethane as a solvent and can only exist at temperatures cold enough for liquid methane will share any ancestry with Earth life. The discovery of a single microbe in Titan's seas would represent an undeniable, completely unambiguous example of a second abiogenesis event. In an instant, we would know that life is absolutely everywhere in the universe.
I see life in Titan's seas as the hail Mary play of astrobiology. Though we have some conjectural models for how such life might work, we have no way of knowing if such life is truly even possible. No one has managed to assemble such a microbe in a lab. So it's a huge gamble whether such life exists. But if it does, it would provide unambiguous proof that life is everywhere in the universe. It's the ultimate high risk/high reward gamble.
[deleted] t1_j6vumrz wrote
Reply to comment by NoRoom2dark in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
[removed]
Benjilator t1_j6vt34y wrote
Reply to comment by AWizard13 in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
I’m a chemist and I don’t think there’s anything you can’t get out of your water so it should be useable in any case. Every other way of getting water will be cheaper, though.
But basically you can just make pure water out of it and add the minerals in later, pretty sure that’s how a lot of our water is made already for consistency.
[deleted] t1_j6vsgjq wrote
Reply to comment by 1992PlymouthAcclaim in Investigations reveal more evidence that Mimas is a stealth ocean world by entered_bubble_50
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j6vrt1b wrote
Reply to comment by jdmcnair in Have you ever thought how/what it would look like to wander through space forever? by Twidom
[removed]
shadowthehh t1_j6wa5cz wrote
Reply to What is the coolest/scariest fact you know about space? by [deleted]
False vacuum decay fucks me up due to the idea that it could happen at any point at any moment.