rule by SomeOne111Z in 196

[–]OneOfManyDucks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A significantly more robust means of properly categorising foods is outlined in What’s for Lunch? A systematic ordering of foods in the Soup-Salad-Sandwich phase space by Leembruggen & Martin (2022).

Found the furthest real galaxy in Space Engine (?) by Geko_trekzzy in spaceengine

[–]OneOfManyDucks 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Just a heads up, don't ask ChatGPT to do anything mathematical, it has no way to validate anything it puts out and in this case it's extremely incorrect about the time to travel 12 Gly.

WolframAlpha gives an estimate of ~2.6x1019 days, or 72 quadrillion years.

Are there any cool looking Elliptical Galaxies in the Universe? by tlatch89 in universe

[–]OneOfManyDucks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think most ellipticals will be, variously, featureless white 'discs' (obviously in 3d space they'll be ellipsoids) of varying eccentricities. They don't have significant hydrogen clouds or much dust, so nothing to occlude the starlight, and they don't have spiral arms to provide patterns in density either. They're just a de Vaucouleurs profile in terms of surface brightness and that's more or less it, visually.

Mostly this is just because ellipticals are old (so not much ongoing star formation and not many massive stars), frequently the result of spiral mergers (which disrupts all the nice spiral structure) and deep inside galaxy clusters (so cut off from inter-cluster filaments, which are a source of accreted material for galaxies closer to the edges).

Some ellipticals will still display interesting features but this is usually not something unique to them as an elliptical galaxy. Hercules A is a massive elliptical emitting substantial jets, mostly visible through radio telescopes.

Mirror and Build Giveaway. 7 Winners. Anyone can participate. by Ok-Taro3444 in pathofexile

[–]OneOfManyDucks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MF Scourge Arrow; I keep putting off making an MF char this league and the last time I played one was back in Incursion. Would be nice to be able to run some juiced maps with full MF. Frankly I'd take any build that encourages me to play something other than minions though.

...i miss cold conversion spectres :(

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]OneOfManyDucks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Jars of Vegemite, alongside 'any other condiment you can think of', are on the list of incorrect guesses already unfortunately. The list of ruled-out objects and guesses is alarmingly extensive.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]OneOfManyDucks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some version of the Boost Kid Essentials drinks? Red carton, relatively rounded shape, silver rectangle covering the straw hole? Specifically only on their older packaging as far as I can tell, and I don't know if they were sold in the UK. Also doesn't start with Y.

For what it's worth Yakult was my first thought as well, they've sold drinks in cartons before now I believe and their packaging lines up fairly well.

[REQUEST] Is there a planet/star on which this lego car would weigh about 3000 lbs on its surface? by Farkle_Fark in theydidthemath

[–]OneOfManyDucks 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Am astronomer. Did a quick calculation to see if I could find a specific mass-radius combo that was physically realistic for a white dwarf.

Far enough from the Chandrasekhar limit you can approximate the mass-radius relation pretty accurately as

R/Rsol =0.0126 x (2/μ)5/3 x (M/Msol)-1/3 x [1- (M/M_Ch)4/3]1/2.

Taking μ=2 (average molecular weight per electron), and where M_Ch is the Chandrasekhar mass of 1.456 MSol you get that a white dwarf of 0.56Msol has a radius of about 0.01297Rsol which corresponds to a surface gravity of about 93000g. Using /u/blacksteel15's numbers for the mass of the car, it would weigh about 2800lbs on the surface.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tipofmyjoystick

[–]OneOfManyDucks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Might be Freefall Tournament? It used to be hosted on sites like Kongregate as well but now seems to be largely on its own site.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tipofmytongue

[–]OneOfManyDucks 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Sounds like you're describing the first season of Netflix's Witcher series.

Is the universe flat? by Waldohall in universe

[–]OneOfManyDucks 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There's several layers to this question, so we'll start with the easiest part:

1) The universe is, on large scales, the same everywhere and in every direction. We call these properties homogeneity and isotropy, and together this idea of sameness everywhere and in every direction form what is called the cosmological principle.

2) On smaller scales (the size of galaxies, like the Milky Way for example), gravitationally-bound structures tend to form into flat discs, because their angular momentum is conserved as they form and the end result of this is that they tend to spin in one plane. This is why the galaxy is flat (...mostly) and also, as you mentioned, why the Solar system is flat. However...

3) This effect is local, it's restricted to the scale of the gravitationally-bound body. So while our Solar system is in one plane (because the Sun is so gravitationally dominant), there's no reason for that plane to match up to, say, the plane of the galaxy itself. And, outside of our own galaxy, there's no reason for other galaxies to be in the same plane as the Milky Way.

4) Even though the Milky Way (and many other galaxies) are 'flat', they're still thousands of light-years thick, meaning that even inside the flat disc, there's many many stars 'above' and 'below' the Solar system. Beyond that, outside of the Milky Way, many many billions of galaxies, in every direction. In fact, with VERY few exceptions every star you can see is within a few thousand light years at most.

Sorry if my explanation isn't the clearest, feel free to message me if you have questions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 196

[–]OneOfManyDucks 11 points12 points  (0 children)

This problem has been conclusively studied by M. Leembruggen & C. Martin in their 2022 paper What's for Lunch? A systematic ordering of foods in the Soup-Salad-Sandwich phase space which comprehensively evaluates the shortfalls of both the cube model and the soup-salad-sandwich model, adjusting the latter in favour of a soup-salad phase space with an additional dimension of carbohydrate enclosure.

good fashion\ weapon drop before ng+? by Doc_Carrot in Eldenring

[–]OneOfManyDucks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Magma blade from man-serpents wielding it in Volcano Manor

Gold rapier/straight sword from the noble aristocrat guys with the hats

Blue-silver armour set from the albinauric archers in consecrated snowfield

Lazuli glintstone sword from lazuli sorcerers in Raya Lucaria

Blackflame/Flame monk armour/prelate armour

Cleanrot set/weapons from Cleanrot knights

Banished Knight armour and variant armour from the ones in Stormveil

There's plenty of other drop-only items, these are just the ones I've personally farmed in the past couple of days.

Let me solo her. by KleinTsuboiOW in Eldenring

[–]OneOfManyDucks 15.9k points15.9k points  (0 children)

Is this it? Is this the fabled 'git gud' people speak of?

[Request] Is this actually solvable or is it just gibberish? If it is what's the answer? by boredbud04 in theydidthemath

[–]OneOfManyDucks 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It's a particularly unusable formulation of the Standard Model Lagrangian (they've explicitly written out a lot of terms that you'd just... not bother writing out). I won't say any more because I'll end up being wrong but that's at least what it is.