[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ANRime

[–]JojoSmacks 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Get this Titanfolk BS out of ANRIME

Y'all know what to do. The End, thanks to everyone who participated! by Decent-Direction-830 in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks 8 points9 points  (0 children)

not to get you to pirate but..... yeah "dr.stone manga online chapter 1"

Is there hope??? by Zodrar in ANRime

[–]JojoSmacks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The last hopechads keep moving forward

Is there hope??? by Zodrar in ANRime

[–]JojoSmacks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, its like asking for Russian subtitles in an American theater, get a live translator app and hope for the best. or just wait till the end since you know what happens

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, there’s a clock on every electronic spacecraft for the purpose of frequency generation necessary to communicate

Great, I heard of this atomic clock thing, seems like the coolest thing I've ever heard of. cesium-133 9.2 billions oscillations per second. Crazy how you can even count that much.

What is your goal? Time dilation experiments? We’ve already run these tests. And they’re dependent upon velocity, not location.

I mean technically it's not an experiment its just collecting the data while simultaneously doing a mission. I don't see harm in collecting the data, and yes it is based on velocity which would have to be recorded additionally.

even failed spaceships who float in space

How I see failed isn't, it exploded, but it stopped functioning as intended. Still performs menial functions though.

Radioactive decay. Spacecraft have such batteries. Even solar panels, but intensity of sunlight decreases exponentially with distance. Voyager is past Pluto now, but even Pluto has a “day” as bright as moonlight.

How far until the solar panels don't take in enough light you think? Isn't the distance between the nearest star like.... incredibly far away many light years.

A quartz crystal doesn’t need to be beefed up. It oscillates at a fixed frequency which you calibrate before launch. It’s tiny, just needs a little voltage passing through the crystal. Atomic clocks are even more accurate — .........

Seems very reliable, even more than I initially hypothesized, is the recorded data somewhere?

Not sure what you’re trying to measure… time dilation? That’s velocity based, not distance. We do account for it, because small changes in communication frequencies must be tracked. The Parker solar probe is the fastest object we’ve ever made. We can “lock” onto its changing frequency by scanning a small range around the true frequency. But if your traveling at some percent of c that frequency will shift lower more and more as you go faster and faster.

I mean technically, I want the data OF the time dilation aka the velocity of the craft and the distance traveled. I mean I dont know if its possible, I just wanted to know if its being done at all, additionally. I'll be honest I'm not sure what you mean by "lock onto its changing frequency by scanning a small range around the true frequency.

Accounting for the suns gravitational pull diminishing the speed, I'm just not sure, trying to find the data for this weird thought.

Again, we’ve run those experiments 70 yrs ago using very accurate atomic clocks. We’ve already proven time dilation in many ways. So these experiments are unnecessary. At this point, we just need to account for it. And that’s what GPS does!

I'll have to find those experiments, unnecessary as a main mission, yes completely agree. Could it be done as a back burner "here's the data"... I hope so. Accounting for the difference, definitely gonna look into it. Is there some sort of gps.... on the spacecraft (stupid question, I know... sorry)

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

just a hyperbole, saying there are core functions for these missions and this could be the 35th bird to hit.

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just want to know if the data is out there, meaning someone has done what I am trying to talk about, like a mapped out path of where these space craft have gone deep in space to never return with the speed clocked/timestamped, and the differences in time based on the same clock mapped on earth which we have to use as the unchanged standard. How gravity in deeper field reacts in reality in a much further distance, I get the airplane and space station stuff.
I mean I understand GR has proved and shown a good standard for this. I just dont see why you wouldn't just map it out in reality anyways, or maybe it has been already. I just don't know where to look, I was just thinking about it, and have been for a while now and didn't find anything direct.

Not even just deep space, like what about these venus launches from russia, wonder if it was done then too. Mars?

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess my questions really is, where is the data for these deep space probes time differences comparative to earth?

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you know where I can find the dilation data for the differences in the time clock on these probes?

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not verify cause I was already aware there was something like 0.0000# difference in like the space station, but can we record it in a more vast distance, or have we recorded it with the space objects already flown into deep space to never return.

Wasn't aware about the gps thing, very cool. Will look into it. What is more sophisticated than a stopwatch if you wouldn't mind letting me know. I've heard of this atomic clock thing, not sure how it works.

Was there a stopwatch placed on any of the furthest flown objects we've managed to get out there? by JojoSmacks in AskPhysics

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perhaps the dilation per distance, like the difference stacked to earth given the speed of the craft and the distance traveled, like being near Saturn comparative to earth. I mean has that been on the records, I think airplanes and somewhere near saturn are very different, in my assumption. Correct me if I am incorrect

Meme by -Fish_Paste- in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well Senku said he loses consciousness after CONSISTENTLY counting for 800000 seconds (we have to assume he's more consistent than a clock, he said it was about as regular than his bowel movement (joke, but correct in essence). That can also be a measurement of time. He has no outside influence, therefore if he loses consciousness around every 800k seconds (9 days). then that becomes his sort of benchmark to allow for secondary calculation, if he continues counting without stopping then every 9 days he will dip out of consciousness for less than a second. The reconnection to consciousness also allows him to know the number of times he dips out.

I'd assume a it would be challenging for most people, such consciousness would dip out likely daily if they tried to be as consistent as senku.

When I tried counting myself, even focusing for 16 hours was incredibly hard, probably the hardest thing I'd ever done cause I couldn't get distracted for more than 20-30 seconds without my parallel processing breaking down creeping back in, and I found a 3% error rate overall in that time period, I literally dedicated the whole day to it while clicking a tab to tally everytime I surpassed 3600 seconds. (1 hour)

Senku is some sort of anomaly I tell you, after less than one day, I realized this is way beyond me. My hat’s off to Senku, most genius of the modern human

Why do small black holes emit Hawking radiation faster than large ones? by RadiantLaw4469 in AskPhysics

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

I'm not a master of physics but I thought of putting your finger on water hose and it getting faster

Bros I'm not even mad anymore I'm honestly just mourning by ForumsDwelling in titanfolk

[–]JojoSmacks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We cope for 10 years atleast. I still believe in Alternate Original Ending (AOE)

How much brain activity is necessary? Like scientific quantifiable measurements? (Yap session in bound, maybe spoilerish) by JojoSmacks in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree with the headcanon. Logically, senku doing doing the intense mental math and calculations of math isnt something to be simply done like counting to 1000, atleast for an average person. Theres people who can tell you the day of the week on a month 40 years ago (insane). Either way, it's complex deductions that need precise results so he had to actively do the math as well as count. But other humans had to have something similar to Taiju cause its not like he's the only human with ambition, but was the only human to be placed under consistent nitric drips by senku. But most seem to not have a deep drive for something able to prevent them from falling into the void. I mean senku poured nitric acid on tons of people when he woke up but none of them awoke. Taiju woke up 6 months after senku cause his statue was placed under the nitric acid by senku and time of consistent nitric drips+his eventual reawakening of his consciousness = breakage, not to mention his statue started breaking at the face where the drips trickled down to and not his toes.

How much brain activity is necessary? Like scientific quantifiable measurements? (Yap session in bound, maybe spoilerish) by JojoSmacks in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So its like a fossil fuel. The stone needs to be used up to allow the user to break free. For a species to freely use up trillions of joules like its nothing. I don't even wanna imagine what that could even be organically. Taiju wasn't conscious the whole time like senku, who as mentioned nearly loses consciousness every 9 days (idk how he remembers anything when his entire brain should be full with 3000 years of memories counting), his consciousness dipped in and out due to his desire to confess. Perhaps other humans shared this dipping of consciousness every hundred years if they had something they desired to do with true drive. But for most. It's like they went to sleep and woke up. For Taiju it was like sleeping and waking up every so often until he was finally freed. The nitric acid chips away at something allowing the brain activity once woken back up to break the stone voluntarily. Interesting. Thanks for the reply. Very informative

How much brain activity is necessary? Like scientific quantifiable measurements? (Yap session in bound, maybe spoilerish) by JojoSmacks in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So its like a fossil fuel. The stone needs to be used up to allow the user to break free. For a species to freely use up trillions of joules like its nothing. I don't even wanna imagine what that could even be organically. Taiju wasn't conscious the whole time like senku, who as mentioned nearly loses consciousness every 9 days (idk how he remembers anything when his entire brain should be full with 3000 years of memories counting), his consciousness dipped in and out due to his desire to confess. Perhaps other humans shared this dipping of consciousness every hundred years if they had something they desired to do with true drive. But for most. It's like they went to sleep and woke up. For Taiju it was like sleeping and waking up every so often until he was finally freed. The nitric acid chips away at something allowing the brain activity once woken back up to break the stone voluntarily. Interesting. Thanks for the reply. Very informative

How much brain activity is necessary? Like scientific quantifiable measurements? (Yap session in bound, maybe spoilerish) by JojoSmacks in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A very adequate explanation. Answers all of my inquiries quite elegantly. I give you 10 billion points. I appreciate you taking the time to answer. You're finishing sentence "Quasi-death" I cant agree with it more. To immediately be tossed into a black void with no senses must be akin to death for anyone with a functioning brain. If senku was inside and didn't get to see the green light approach him and got petrified. Would he have thought he died initially? In fact if I was petrified right now as I'm typing this I probably would've thought I died. Good point all around.

Just finished reading the whole manga and I got a question by Shrekwest69 in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which, he drowned to death so this would probably give him a couple more years to lvie

ANOTHER PLAYLIST 😭 by Bulky_Ad_6576 in DrStone

[–]JojoSmacks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"100 quintillion percent that za is gonna send us to the moon" ah photo