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#42864 09/24/2001 10:28 AM
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#42865 09/24/2001 2:13 PM
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Dear Max: I got out the October Discover and looked at the article again. A few astronomers interested in comet orbits think a group of them may have been caused to head for us by an object in the Oort cloud five times the size of Jupiter 2 trillion miles away that orbits Sun once in five million years. Another NASA telescope to be launched next July may find it.


#42866 09/24/2001 6:54 PM
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#42867 09/24/2001 8:18 PM
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A planet 5 times bigger than Jupiter would really be something to see, by Jove!

Gee, just like the sun!


#42868 09/24/2001 9:11 PM
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Dear Max - never have I seen "gist" verbed, much less made transitive.

Is this common usage among Zildians, or just among the uniquely gifted?


#42869 09/24/2001 10:17 PM
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"Gee, just like the sun!" This object, though huge is not hot enough to emit any light, and is so far away from any source of light that it is exceedingly dim. And it is moving so very slowly that photographs at six month intervals to use parallax to pick it out by its shift in position so far have not found it.


#42870 09/24/2001 10:28 PM
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>Maverick astronomers ...

He gets around doesn't he?


#42871 09/24/2001 10:53 PM
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#42872 09/25/2001 5:24 PM
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Thanks Max! Although I recognize that many of us are not disposed to being noun-verbers (nouns-verber?), I do like the result of verbificating "gist". I also admire the candor of the architectifiers of the software you describe.

Is there another word out there that would serve in the place of the verbed "gist"?

p.s. - in writing this post, my fingers insisted on typying "noun-berber" twice - which brought to mind images of the pack of us, mounted on our dromedaries, lugging our nouns 'cross the desert wastes, off to trade with the verb-Tuaregs at Conjunction Junction


#42873 09/25/2001 5:38 PM
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Is there another word out there that would serve in the place of the verbed "gist"?

synopsize? summarize?


#42874 09/25/2001 6:15 PM
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never have I seen "gist" verbed, much less made transitive.

If you're going to verb it I don't see how you can help but make it transitive.


#42875 09/25/2001 6:52 PM
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"Is there another word out there that would serve in the place of the verbed "gist"?

synopsize? summarize?"

Abridge, abstract, and a dandy word I haven't heard for a long time "précis".


#42876 09/25/2001 7:16 PM
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In this case we have both nouned and verbed an adjective, but we done it out of a furrn language so it's OK.


#42877 09/25/2001 7:53 PM
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and a dandy word I haven't heard for a long time "précis".
is "précis" a verb, or or is it a noun only?



#42878 09/25/2001 8:05 PM
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Précis has been verbed *and nouned.


#42879 09/25/2001 8:15 PM
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Précis-ely.

Has left ze buildeeng.



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#42880 10/10/2001 9:22 PM
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Max, I wasn't particularly impressed with the article. There really nothing new there. The essay at
http://geobeck.tripod.com/frontier/planet.htm
gives a much more thorough and much more amusing account of the science involved, plus other interesting matters.



#42881 10/10/2001 9:36 PM
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#42882 10/10/2001 9:44 PM
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When it's finally spotted, I bet it's oblong and dead black ...



The idiot also known as Capfka ...
#42883 10/10/2001 10:44 PM
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Dear Keiva: Whatever your objections to the Discover story, the URL you gave is to an article by Isaac Azimov which makes no mention of the Oort cloud.


#42884 10/10/2001 11:49 PM
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Incomplete. Knowledge from other Asimov:
A further planet was hypothesized as an explanation for the irregularity in Uranus's orbit. Searching for that planet, Neptune was discovered.

A further planet was hypothesized as an explanation for the irregularity in Neptune's orbit. Searching for that planet, Pluto was discovered in the 1930's.

However, satellite probes (in the 1970's, I think) revealed that Pluto is quite small -- too small to account for the Neptune irregularities. Ever since then, it's been hypothesized that there's something else, further out. The astronomer featured in Dicover is not, in this, working on anything new and novel. Nor is he, by his own admission, anywhere near a breakthorough.

My understanding (very vague) is if that something were as far out as the Oort cloud, it would have to be extremely masssive to account for the Neptune irregularities. And that raises (to me) the further question: if it's that big, how come its gravity hasn't been great enough that the its core heat, generated by gravitational collapse, triggered nuclear fusion -- so that the body would be become a star (and thus visible), rather than a planet?

Seem unlikely to me. My conclusion is that the guy featured in the Discover article is a squirrel. Reading between the lines of the comments of other astronomers quoted in that aritcle, it appears that they share my conclusion. I notice that the featured astronomer is working on this solely "on the side"; no one's interested enough to be funding him.




#42885 10/11/2001 1:43 AM
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When it's finally spotted, I bet it's oblong and dead black ...
Well, this IS 2001, after all...



#42886 10/11/2001 2:32 AM
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#42887 10/11/2001 3:52 AM
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unless I miss my guess, it's been some while since ol' Isaac A. has written on this subject.

[and isn't Franco still dead too?]


#42888 10/11/2001 5:00 AM
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Max, my understanding (again, per Asimov) is that it's believed that Jupiter itself is just about at the brink of the size above which nuclear fusion would be triggered. (There is rough evidence than Jupiter itself is a bit hotter than such an object would be if non-nuclear, thus suggesting a small amount of nuclear activity at the planet's core). And the Discover article hypothesizes an object roughly 10 times as massive as Jupiter. Raising the question: if so, why no nuclear ignition? (I ask that as a layman, of course.)

As to your point about any known planets orbiting other stars, my answer is very straightforward: I don't know. Let's see if either of us can find anything with a little LIU, as to their size and how their existence was seen or inferred.

tsuwm, granted that Asimov is dead; my point is that the article in essence provided no new science beyond what Asimov wrote some time ago.


#42889 10/11/2001 6:30 AM
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#42890 10/11/2001 1:43 PM
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as Max's links will affirm, things have changed a bit since IA wrote on the subject.
here's another link: http://www.nationalacademies.org/ssb/wsmoch1.htm


#42891 10/11/2001 3:13 PM
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tsuwm, I don't see any real changes; just the same old speculation. BTW, Max, you don't need anyone to "gist" the article; your link gives 100% of the text in the printed magazine.


#42892 10/11/2001 6:19 PM
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#42893 10/11/2001 10:56 PM
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Max, I'm professing ignorance, not scepticism. No doubt extrasolar planets exist (the converse is, statistically, absurd), and I think I recall that some have been detected. I just don't recall anything more about those that were detected. (dumb ignorant -e)

But to make this a word-post: if "solar" is limited to our star, and not to stars generally, what do you call a planetary system around another star? Is there any term less cumbersome than "extrasolar system"?


#42894 10/11/2001 11:11 PM
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#42895 10/12/2001 12:26 AM
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#42896 10/12/2001 1:39 AM
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Though you might like this...

http://www.nineplanets.org/hypo.html


#42897 10/12/2001 1:52 AM
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Well, you do learn something every day: I'd thought that the closest star to our solar system was Alpha Centauri, but apparently it is actually Proxima Centauri. Wordwind, two sites I checked listed the closest star to our planet as the sun, so yes, you're right (not that I doubted it).

And, a system of planets orbiting a star is a solar system.
Just not our solar system.


#42898 10/12/2001 11:44 AM
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#42899 10/12/2001 3:52 PM
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Neptune's rotational axis is reasonably near-horizonal: that is, it lies much closer to the plane of the planet's orbit than is the case with any other planet of our system.

Also, it uniquely rotates "in the wrong direction", when compared with the other planets.

A distinction as to Sirius -- it is the brightest star in our sky (apart from the very occasional supernova), but not the most luminous. That is, others cast off more light, but Sirius appears brightest to us because it is far closer to us than those more-luminous stars (and is far more luminous than the closer stars). In technical terms, it has the greatest magnitude but not the greatest absolute magnitude.


#42900 10/12/2001 4:58 PM
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another bit of astronomical trivia, this time word-related:

Which of the major bodies in the (our) solar system have names that are not taken from classical greek or roman mythology? (I say "major bodies" to exclude asteroids -- which are so numerous that we've long since abandoned classical names -- and comets. Let's take "major" to mean larger than the largest asteroid, Ceres.)

The obvious answers are "earth; moon; sun". There are at least two others.


#42901 10/12/2001 5:38 PM
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Ariel and Oberon are both bigger than Ceres, which is 950 km or so. These two moons of Uranus, like many others orbiting that planet, came from Shakespeare.

edited later

Umbriel and Titania are also larger than Ceres. Titania comes from Titan, so that probably doesn't count. Umbriel is from Rape of the Lock, I think.



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#42903 10/12/2001 6:06 PM
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correct. (I'd forgotten Oberon)
The pairing of Ariel and Unbriel (light and dark) is rather neat, is it not? Help me out, TEd: aren't they moons of the same planet, which were discovered and named together as a pair? (too lazy to LIU)


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