Jun 302021
 

A 1980’s Boeing concept art depicting a passenger transport of 100 or so years in the future. It has a number of… interesting features including a front that opens up like an Arakeen Sandworm. The cockpit and a fair amount of space behind it hinge upwards to provide access to the sizable interior of the aircraft. The gigantic transparent canopies are certainly a remarkable feature. Even the passenger windows on the side are vast compared to the tiny human figures. The engines look somewhat small for the design, but at least they exhaust almost directly onto the vast canopy over the tail “lounge” area. Surely that’ll not pose any problems…

The full rez scan of the artwork has been made available at 300 DPI to all $4/month patrons/subscribers in the 2021-06 APR Extras folder at Dropbox. If you would like to help fund the acquisition and preservation of such things, along with getting high quality scans for yourself, please consider signing on either for the APR Patreon or the APR Monthly Historical Documents Program.




 Posted by at 12:15 am
Jun 292021
 

Photos show bodies of COVID victims floating along Ganges River in India

The bodies aren’t, apparently, being dumped straight into the river. They’re being buried in *shallow* graves in the sand on the shore of the river, Which… is essentially the same thing, just with a time delay. I remain astounded that the same nation with hundreds of millions of people who think it’s good and proper to bathe and drink in the same “sacred” river they dump bodies and sewage directly into has homemade nukes and ballistic missiles and missions to the Moon and Mars.

 Posted by at 11:04 pm
Jun 292021
 

When a black hole encounters a neutron star, who wins?

Well, clearly not the neutron star. Duh.

LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Finds Elusive Mergers of Black Holes with Neutron Stars

LIGO continues to astound. In my lifetime gravitational astronomy has gone from “it’s maybe kinda scientifically plausible but so far beyond our technology as to be effectively impossible” to “oh, look here’s another collision of black holes a bagrillion light years away.”

 Posted by at 5:50 pm
Jun 292021
 

I’ve never understood the adulation and exorbitant wealth that gets lavished upon some people who serve as entertainers. In particular, their thoughts on political or scientific matters; people who are professionals in running or beating the tar out of other people or picking up heavy objects seem unlikely sources of wisdom on more intellectual matters. But… this is the world we live in, so one must accept the reality of it.

Still, there are some athletes who are really quite awful people when it comes to their opinions and politics. There are athletes who want to burn the US flag on the Olympic podium; others who get pissy and stamp their feet when their own national anthem is played.

But then…

On the far left is the loser in the  Women’s Hammer Throw of the 2020 U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team Trials. She came in third and is annoyed that the anthem is being played, so she turned her back on the anthem, her team and her nation. But in the middle and the right are the first and second place winners, DeAnna Price and Brooke Andersen. Compare the losers petulant annoyance with DeAnna Price (from 2019):

Someone here seems like a happier person, less likely to be an insufferably fanatical wokescold, permanently angry about crap that happened centuries ago or because people believe differently than her.

Also, from the world of non-US athletes, showing US athletes how it should be done:

 Posted by at 4:50 pm
Jun 272021
 

Habitable Planets With Earth-Like Biospheres May Be Much Rarer Than Thought

Short form : Earth-sized planets made out of the right amounts of the right stuff might exist in their bajillions, comfortably orbiting within their stars habitable zones. But the majority of stars out there are smaller and cooler than the sun. Normally this has the problem of tidal locking the planet tot he star, but if the planet escapes that fate (by having a moon, or orbiting a large-enough small star to avoid tidal locking) there’s another problem. Cooler stars put out a different spectrum of light. Even if the watts-per-square-meter of light is the same as on Earth, if the spectrum is wrong, photosynthesis using known systems might not work. Consequently, if life arises on a planet orbiting a red dwarf, it might not evolve adequate photosythetic systems to transform the planet, as life on Earth took a few billion years to do.

This might also mean that an Earth-like world could be located and terraformed and seeded with Earth-life… only to have the plants sicken and keel over.

Genetic modification might or might not fix this, depending on whether or not photosynthesis using redder spectrums can be made practical. Another approach: if humanity has the ability to cross the gulf between the stars, we can do lots of other stuff. This should include parking fusion reactors in orbit and using the generated power to create the biologically necessary frequencies of light. A giant UV flashlight in the sky, parked in geostationary orbit right in front of (or next to) the sun.

 Posted by at 3:54 am
Jun 262021
 

Courtesy Brandeis University:

Oppressive Language List

“Trigger warning” is now politically incorrect. As is “picnic.” And “rule of thumb.” “She,” “he,” “you guys,” “walk-in,” “African-American,” “no can do,” “transgendered,” “people of color,” “victim,” “survivor,” “spirit animal,” “addict,” “mentally ill,” “prostitute,” and more.

 Posted by at 3:44 pm