Both of those would be detected as light coming back, but with different spectra and geometry, so fair enough.
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Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Australia@aussie.zone•Eight sunscreens that failed their SPF claims tested by same overseas labEnglish1·9 months ago
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Australia@aussie.zone•Eight sunscreens that failed their SPF claims tested by same overseas labEnglish41·9 months agoWhatever is not reflected is transmitted. Where else could the energy go?
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Australia@aussie.zone•Why are hotels in Australia so inexpensive compared to hotels in the USA and Canada?English91·9 months agoIt helps that the seasons and school holidays are six months out of phase compared to the US and Canada. In essence, you’re comparing Australian winter prices with American summer prices.
That’s a mouse. Sylvester is chasing it as we speak.
At least you’re rich, if you can afford to pay those amounts to your friends!
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•RFK Jr.’s health department calls Nature “junk science,” cancels subscriptionsEnglish37·9 months agoI can agree with that. And I’m sure it’s because letters on the forefront are published quickly without time to consider all the possible problems.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•RFK Jr.’s health department calls Nature “junk science,” cancels subscriptionsEnglish252·9 months agoAnecdotal only, sorry. I’m sure it varies by field, and it’s more about letters than longer papers. There are probably fields where Nature is excellent, but I know that there is at least one where the odds of a letter to Nature being accurate a few years later is about 50%.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•RFK Jr.’s health department calls Nature “junk science,” cancels subscriptionsEnglish384·9 months agoAnd, for that reason, about half the papers (depending on the field) published in Nature are wrong.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Australia@aussie.zone•Canvas (fedi's r/place) starts in 12 days, here's the Australia flag plans this year!English2·9 months agoMaybe it’s like the GPL: using copyright to ensure it isn’t misused?
Assume a spherical chicken…
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•98 degrees upstairs, ac stopped working at 8am.English4·10 months agoAnd be grateful it’s not something so much more expensive to fix!
Excellent, physics in service of humanity!
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Science Memes@mander.xyz•Maybe not nursery rhimes about balloonsEnglish6·10 months agoElements formed by alpha capture. Since alpha particles have 2 protons, it’s generally elements with an even number of protons.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Science Memes@mander.xyz•Maybe not nursery rhimes about balloonsEnglish12·10 months agoSome stellar atmosphere models also add “alpha”, which provides an extra knob for the abundance of alpha-capture elements. If you need anything more than that, you’re doing some niche astrophysics.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Dad for a Minute@lemmy.world•Hey dad, I just want to hear "I'm proud of you and what you have achieved" from youEnglish101·10 months agoAnd for pushing through in spite of the active efforts to display your achievements.
Well done, and all the very best for whatever comes next!
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Space@mander.xyz•Astronomy show accidentally reveals unseen structure in our solar system1·10 months agoWe have never detected a single object (in situ) from this theorized population. There is no data.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Space@mander.xyz•Astronomy show accidentally reveals unseen structure in our solar system10·10 months agoIt’s worth pointing out that it’s theorized structure. It shows up in a simulation of a solar system population that has never been identified.
Balthazar@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•what are some texts you found cute between you and your SO?8·10 months agoThey’ll die of diabetes together. How romantic!
Party on, Ted! No, wait, that sounds wrong.
Filth often emerges after a set interval relative to nutrition intake.