Log In
Create Account
SlickerTalk
Search Archives
The Leaderboard
The FAQ
Login
Create Account
Search
Dr. S. Talk
TT/ST Wiki
How Well Do You Know ...
RSS Feed
Hosting by DigitalOcean
Support ST on Ko-Fi
Links Only
50 Results
100 Results
250 Results
500 Results
1000 Results
5000 Results
2 Weeks
2 Months
6 Months
1 Year
2 Years
5 Years
All Time
Live
Down to Post
Backboards:
Live
________________
1: Dec 10, 18:15
2: Dec 10, 12:28
3: Dec 10, 09:30
4: Dec 10, 05:59
5: Dec 9, 17:07
6: Dec 9, 13:47
7: Dec 9, 10:33
8: Dec 9, 07:33
9: Dec 8, 17:50
10: Dec 8, 10:32
11: Dec 8, 06:23
12: Dec 7, 16:52
13: Dec 7, 07:17
14: Dec 6, 14:40
15: Dec 6, 10:07
16: Dec 6, 07:32
17: Dec 5, 19:48
18: Dec 5, 12:51
19: Dec 5, 10:39
20: Dec 5, 07:07
Posts: 157
LIR: Jax. Voyagers are still cruising along. Space is big :) -- nm
Posted by
oblique (aka kkuphal)
Nov 5 '19, 07:11
(No message)
Responses:
What was the 54000°F number I saw? Seemed unlikely. Maybe I read it wrong. -- nm
-
Beryllium
Nov 5, 07:12
3
Ah, this makes more sense: 54 Kelvin. Some publication seems to have mistaken "54K" for "54,000 degrees", which is 5 times hotter than the sun. -- nm
-
Beryllium
Nov 5, 07:41
2
Nope. Looks like the 54,000 degrees is right, but has more to do with particle velocity and magnetism than what we normally think of as heat. -- nm
-
Beryllium
Nov 5, 07:53
1
(Like, if you stick your hand out, you might get a radiation burn, but not before freezing it off) -- nm
-
Beryllium
Nov 5, 08:12
Post a message
top
Replies are disabled on threads older than 7 days.