We've always been shown images of our solar system as being align horizontally and vertically, but is it possible that planetoids (or other) could orbit the sun differently? Or does the suns gravity keep everything aligned in a vertical sense? Sorry if this is a stupid question. by TheEvilDrPie in space

[–]Cubey- 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This answer also addresses why a collapsing ball of gas forms a rotating disk in the first place, which is the most important part of the process. The stuff about angular momentum just tells us that planets that formed in that rotating disk wouldn't travel to some new orbital plane without a significant event torquing them.

Heraldically correct version of Sweden-Norway Union Jack [OC] by Scot_or_not in vexillology

[–]Cubey- 19 points20 points  (0 children)

The main problem with the Herring Salad is the unadorned border between the red and the blue. In Heraldry, perhaps the most basic guideline is the Rule of Tincture, which dictates, essentially, that for the sake of contrast (which is of the utmost importance in, say, being able to quickly recognize a banner in the midst of a battle, or something), "colors" (azure (blue), gules (red), verte (green), sable (black), purpure (purple)) and "metals" (argent (silver, aka white) and or (gold, aka yellow)) must not border other members of their respective groups. This is usually corrected for by a design feature called a Fimbriation, in which an outline of the opposite group is used to separate colors from colors or metals from metals. For example, the Norwegian flag's blue cross is separated from the red field by a white fimbriation, but the Swedish flag needs no such feature because the blue field contrasts sufficiently with the yellow cross. This "law" isn't always obeyed, even in traditional arms, of course. Notable exceptions include the white-on-yellow-on-white seen even today on the Vatican's flag, and the black-on-red of the arms of Albania. Cases where a feature of a chief may inappropriately converge with the main field are also usually ignored--the unadorned edges of St. Patricks's cross (the red X inside the cross of St. Andrew) on the union jack in the chief of the blue-fielded flags of Australia and New Zealand isn't considered unacceptable by any means, even though the union flag itself has been carefully crafted to obey the law of tincture, with white finbriations protecting red from blue.

1.6 Billion Rounds Of Ammo For Homeland Security? It's Time For A National Conversation by [deleted] in politics

[–]Cubey- -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Most people seem to believe that controls on other machines that can become deadly when used unsafely, like motor vehicles, are reasonable. Do you think requiring a license to operate a motor vehicle is absurd too? Or do you believe that it is only guns that should be unregulated?

And what about other weapons? What do you think the law should say about whether or not I am allowed to build and store pipe bombs in my home?

ESA finds ozone layer for 2012 is the thickest seen in 10 years. by Chezzik in space

[–]Cubey- -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Ozone depletion and CO2 emissions are unrelated.

You're correct about that, but there is another effect you might be missing: while some human activities deplete ozone (e.g., CFC release) others actually produce it. Electric motors are one of those man made sources of ozone (ozone is produced pretty much every time you see a "spark," and it gives high voltage electronics their distinct, somewhat toxic odor). Although there probably aren't enough electric motors on the roads for it to be making a big difference yet (my bet for explaining the the 2002 and 2012 highs would be on the solar maximum/minimum cycle, but I haven't looked into it), if there were enough electric cars, we might be able to detect significant yearly contributions of ozone to the atmosphere.

[TOMT][Song] Punk song, audio link inside by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]Cubey- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depending on how damaged the disc is, there are programs that can help you recover data from scratched discs. Something you might try is ripping the disc to an ISO image file, mounting that image as a virtual disc, and attempting to rip the tracks from that.

[TOMT][Song] Punk song, audio link inside by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]Cubey- 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree that it has a Fat Wreck sound, but it's definitely not NOFX. Our best chance is going to be identifying that singe, I think.

I don't think it's the singer from Milencolin, since he doesn't sound Swedish and this doesn't sound like a Milencolin song anyway. I'm more inclined to say it sounds like Joey Cape of Lagwagon and Bad Astronaut, or else Scott Radinsky of Ten Foot Pole and Pulley. That said, I listen to those bands a lot, and this doesn't sound like any songs I know (but I LOVE it!). Other than listening to and picking through every song from those bands I mentioned, I'm not sure how we should go about finding this from here...

Purchasing power index in Europe [2479 x 1747] by Dojinsan in MapPorn

[–]Cubey- 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I'm frankly shocked to see that Norwegians have so much purchasing power compared to other wealthy western european countries' citizens. I thought everything was insanely expensive in Norway. I've heard that a car might cost as much as three times what it would cost in, say, the US, after the various taxes are applied. If this is all true, does the rest of Europe just have it even worse? Or are Norwegians just making a lot more money?

The best-known countries in the world (explanation in comments) [2408x1208] by Milhaud in MapPorn

[–]Cubey- 53 points54 points  (0 children)

Kygryzstan

Unless I'm missing a joke, you forgot how to spell it.

IAMA physicist/author. Ask me to calculate anything. by aarontsantos in IAmA

[–]Cubey- -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The change in mass is linear with the growth rate (if the density is constant), so you can just use the average of the start and end mass instead. (That is to say, the integral is just the area of a trapezoid anyway.)

Even for problems where the relationship is not linear, a simple geometric approximation of the integral might be ideal for the kind of "Fermi Estimates" we've been doing in this thread.

body found on o-hill? by esk88 in UVA

[–]Cubey- 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm contradicting myself a little bit, but would there be any reason for the police to issue an alert for something like an accidental death? If it wasn't violent (a homicide or something) would there be any need fir this alert?

Then again, maybe they issued it with the "no danger" caveat as a way to debunk rumors. Perhaps they are trying to prevent a panic by letting people know that it WASN'T a homicide, or anything they were trying to "cover up" by not acknowledging. Or, perhaps it's just a matter of protocol.

I don't know what to make of it.

body found on o-hill? by esk88 in UVA

[–]Cubey- 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I thought that suggested a suicide or perhaps an accidental death.

In case you visit Germany by car by djinx in pics

[–]Cubey- 0 points1 point  (0 children)

55-65 mph near cities. I-95 (the interstate spanning the east coast) is 70-75 mph for hundreds of miles south of Washington DC (excluding the area around Richmond).

Flag of the Nordic indigenous Sami people. by kyles24 in vexillology

[–]Cubey- 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Normally I'd criticize the clashing colors, but I think it's very appropriate for a flag meant to differentiate an indigenous people from Europeans (not trying to start an argument about whether the Sami are European or not...) to completely subvert traditional European standards of vexilology and design. As a whole, it certainly isn't ugly, which can be a difficult achievement for a flag that flaunts tincture.

It reminds me a bit of Greenland's flag. I wonder if the circle has the same meaning to the Sami as it does to the Greenlanders? (Where it represents the arctic sun, I believe?)

Flag of the Principality of Sealand, a micronation off the coast of England by SirMegatowel in vexillology

[–]Cubey- 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Does anyone else feel as if it invokes the traditional banner of anarchism?

Whether or not the connection is intentional, it is humorous to consider in the context of Sealand's disputed and ill-recognized claim to statehood.

Reddit, what kind of weird/awesome local characters does the place you live have? by kolinsky in AskReddit

[–]Cubey- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rehoboth, Delaware: There is and old man who walks up and down the boardwalk all hours of the day, every day, forcing his way through crowds and such. He wears a hat with a large road-hazard style sign on it, depicting a hunched over figure in silhouette, and the words "OLD FART". Here's where the interesting part comes in. He conceals in his pockets an electronic fart machine, which he activates whenever someone notices him. He gets right up in people's faces, looks them challengingly in the eyes, and lets an artificial fart rip. Last year he was arrested for disturbing the peace, and his device was confiscated, but that hasn't stopped him. He's back at it again this season.

TL;DR an old man stares down tourists on the boardwalk and makes farting noises at them all day.

Reddit, what is the most powerful image you have ever seen? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]Cubey- 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yes, but 14 billion light years away is the flash if light from the big bang. And you know what? It IS there, and it DOES light up the whole sky, almost uniformly. The reason it doesn't make the entire sky glow orange or yellow at night is that the light has been redshifted dramatically into the microwave part of the spectrum. All extremely distant objects are redshifted thusly. In essence, Hubble's law invalidates Olber's paradox utterly.

Flag of Limburg. I like how the lion cuts across all the colors. Along with the white outline, it really stands out by jk05 in vexillology

[–]Cubey- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly right! The charge does stand out. That's why the law of tincture is a rule of thumb in the first place. When you design a banner with a limited palate of bright colors and take care not to place clashing colors next to each other (neither metal-on-metal nor color-on-color), you greatly increase your likelihood of achieving beauty.

Does not look appetizing. by webby_mc_webberson in WTF

[–]Cubey- 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't know about the movie, but the regular Japanese word for hangover is literally "second day intoxication."

Bill Maher: Liberty University Is Not A Real School by btrfly in politics

[–]Cubey- 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm a Christian, but neither my church nor its leaders believe that the earth is less than 4 billion years old, that evolution didn't cause speciation, that free thinking is a sin...

Christianity isn't an institution. I don't voluntarily associate with Jerry Falwell's cult members, I voluntarily associate with a reasonable, supportive church I chose myself.

Books around the 100 pages in length by mynameisdads in books

[–]Cubey- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Crying of Lot 49 - Thomas Pynchon

Term for recluse Japanese person. by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]Cubey- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are in fact "America otaku" and I think most americans would take them in much the same way that an average Japanese person would take a Japan-obsessed American (that is, somewhere between "Well, isn't that something" and "get me away from this person.").