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How big is 25 LM????

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Re: How big is 25 LM????
Post by petercharters   » Sat Jul 05, 2014 8:10 am

petercharters
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danpcman wrote:There's a Monty Python song here somewhere...


That's one of my favourite Monty Python songs...

Just remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolving
And revolving at nine hundred miles an hour,
That's orbiting at nineteen miles a second, so it's reckoned,
A sun that is the source of all our power.
The sun and you and me and all the stars that we can see
Are moving at a million miles a day
In an outer spiral arm, at forty thousand miles an hour,
Of the galaxy we call the 'Milky Way'.
Our galaxy itself contains a hundred billion stars.
It's a hundred thousand light years side to side.
It bulges in the middle, sixteen thousand light years thick,
But out by us, it's just three thousand light years wide.
We're thirty thousand light years from galactic central point.
We go 'round every two hundred million years,
And our galaxy is only one of millions of billions
In this amazing and expanding universe.

The universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding
In all of the directions it can whizz
As fast as it can go, at the speed of light, you know,
Twelve million miles a minute, and that's the fastest speed there is.
So remember, when you're feeling very small and insecure,
How amazingly unlikely is your birth,
And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space,
'Cause there's bugger all down here on Earth.

The "expansion at the speed of light" bit no longer quite matches our current understandings, but it's still a great song. :)
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Re: How big is 25 LM????
Post by Lord Skimper   » Thu Jul 24, 2014 4:22 am

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Location: Calgary, Nova, Gryphon.

One of you almost caught the mistake. The probe is 3 AU away from Pluto. It will be there is about a year from now. Everything flies in bigger and bigger orbits.

It is going to be 4 light hours or so away from Earth. Plus there will be times it is behind the sun and totally out of communications.
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Re: How big is 25 LM????
Post by vovchara   » Thu Jul 24, 2014 7:54 am

vovchara
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Location: Germany

there is a very nice solar system model in Göttingen(Germany) http://www.planetarium-goettingen.de/Planetenweg/ Sun+ Planets, scale 1:2E09. Extremely helpful to put everything in perspective :shock:
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Re: How big is 25 LM????
Post by Hutch   » Thu Jul 24, 2014 9:14 am

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vovchara wrote:there is a very nice solar system model in Göttingen(Germany) http://www.planetarium-goettingen.de/Planetenweg/ Sun+ Planets, scale 1:2E09. Extremely helpful to put everything in perspective :shock:


IIRC, there is a 'walk' at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, AZ that also shows the distances involved (albeit not over 1,000 yards).

And IIRC again, the Hayden Planetarium in New York has an indoor (built around a sprial walkway) representation.

But the message is the sameat any of the locations..space is )_(^^%$&*79 huge and we are, a Carl Sagan put it, just a 'pale blue dot" in a vast universe,
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No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow.

What? Look, somebody's got to have some damn perspective around here! Boom. Sooner or later. BOOM! -LT. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova, Babylon 5
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Re: How big is 25 LM????
Post by SWM   » Thu Jul 24, 2014 8:32 pm

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Location: U.S. east coast

The Boston Museum of Science has built a scale model of the Solar System, too. The Sun is in the lobby of the museum. Earth is at a hotel a couple blocks away. Pluto is way outside of Boston, 42 miles from the Museum, at the last stop on the Green Line of the subway. It's one of the oldest giant outdoor scale models of the Solar System.
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