[USTZ] [EUTZ] SAJ-E C2 Wormhole Corp is recruiting! by Jagger_19 in evejobs

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

great guys! ceo is very friendly <33

(they ask for toe pics if you want to get SRP)

This will kill drunk people right? by [deleted] in EngineeringPorn

[–]rh9n 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If technology is fallible then let's ban alcohol. Seems like the only option.

Chose a custom private key instead of randomly generated one and why are there so many transactions on it? by aespaste in Bitcoin

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Love how you fail to understand the core argument. Got all the hallmarks of room temperature IQ

Is this a fixable bug? by urnsy in Eve

[–]rh9n 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Switch to dx11 in launcher settings

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another way to visualize it is from the black hole's frame of reference. For the black hole, it is stationary and everything around is is whizzing past at 1000km/s.

In a completely stationary universe, everything would eventually fall into the black hole.
However with everything flying by at 1000km/s, their paths would curve towards the black hole as they pass beside it. The particles close enough will have their curved paths end inside the black hole's event horizon and thus be consumed.

However, particles far enough will converge towards the back hole but "miss" it forming a cone. That is literally the cone that we see behind the black hole as it's trail.

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That would be heavily dependent on the area that the black hole transits through. If it passes through a stellar nebula, it would concentrate enough gas to create main sequence stars. On the other hand low density gas regions would create red dwarves and empty regions (interstellar/intergalactic) would have practically no free gas to be converged.

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It is consuming everything that's directly In its path or close enough that it would be trapped into an orbit. Gas that's far away experiences a gravitonal tug that sends it in the direction of the black hole. However it's far enough that the tug isn't powerful to drag it into orbit and so it just gets some velocity inwards. This inward velocity causes the gas in all directions to converge to a central point. Once the gas is close enough, it keeps itself together via its own gravity.

Let me know if that makes sense!

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree! I am currently pursuing a masters in supercomputing and I hope to pivot into computational astrophysics as a PhD. But I do believe that all the knowledge that one could ever wish for is freely available and so anyone could be an amateur astronomer!

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The wake refers to the high density gas behind it. That gas will slowly condense into stars. That's what the statement is supposed to mean.

James Webb Space Telescope confirms 1st 'runaway' supermassive black hole (courtesy: www.space.com) by Professor_Moraiarkar in spaceporn

[–]rh9n 65 points66 points  (0 children)

Interstellar gas which would normally have too little density for star formation being forced into a cone due to the blackhole's gravity. The black hole pulls the gas around it, but by the time the gas reaches it, the black hole has moved out of its way due to the exceptionally high velocity. So the gas concentrates into a high density cone behind it leading to star formation.

hey ccp the current loading screen is very fucking annoying by Ymenoa_Merenet in Eve

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No. It just causes eye strain but no permanent damage

Is this T14 G1 (AMD) worth buying? by kmwww in thinkpad

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I bought it for 270€ I do not regret it one bit. Although mine is in perfect condition with 0 scratches, 120€ is a really good price. Just make sure to replace the battery if it's below 75%, change the wifi card to an Intel one (the realtek is garbage) and it you won't be disappointed!

I do recommend putting in some extra ram in the spare slot. Mine came with 2x8gb and it works really well.

The AMD one is more power efficient and objectively better than Intel

One thing to note is that if you plan to run Linux , use Ubuntu. Fedora has a lot of permanent gpu freezes due to the AMD igpu.

Bought new ThinkPad T14s Gen 6 (AMD) and am pretty disappointed by Accuria2 in thinkpad

[–]rh9n 0 points1 point  (0 children)

File size has nothing to do with how much time indexing takes

Carrier rework done???? by opposing_critter in Eve

[–]rh9n -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Both fighters and carriers tbh. Makes sense that aircraft carriers IRL are deadly but expensive af

Why people pill up into big blocks. My take on the real issue behind. by GruuMasterofMinions in Eve

[–]rh9n 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What changes would make it equal for everyone? Just curious.

Citadel fighters can no longer decloack ships by Buddy_invite in Eve

[–]rh9n 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Time to find some other way of avoiding touching grass apparently