How Big Is The Sola...
 

[Closed] How Big Is The Solar System?

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[url= http://i.imgur.com/LRSV8iK.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/zJ0aAQW.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/zJ0aAQW.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/DhDassf.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/DhDassf.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/pQRsjNm.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/pQRsjNm.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/axe4Jyt.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/axe4Jyt.pn g" target="_blank">http://i.imgur.com/LRSV8iK.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/zJ0aAQW.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/zJ0aAQW.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/DhDassf.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/DhDassf.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/pQRsjNm.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/pQRsjNm.png [/img][/url][url= http://i.imgur.com/axe4Jyt.png ][img] http://i.imgur.com/axe4Jyt.pn g"/> [/img][/url]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 9:38 am
 DezB
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You must have a bigger monitor than me cos I had to keep scrolling down.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 9:41 am
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Woah - Honda make comets? Cool!


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 9:51 am
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Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 10:55 am
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On the subject of depth:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:07 am
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22 million years if continous scrolling, almost as long as a 650b v 26" thread


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:09 am
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Grrrr! Mariana Trench = Himalayas, Challenger Deep = Everest.

And you need to add 2012 (James Cameron) to the 1960 at the bottom.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:11 am
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I feel rather small and insignificant after looking at this thread now.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:26 am
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Solar System? Pah!

[url= http://htwins.net/scale2/ ]the scale of the universe[/url]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:31 am
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I preferred the other sea depth one - it swapped when I was about to post.

Really good these though (except the long cat)


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:33 am
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Ive got cramp in my finger


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:41 am
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Might make you feel small to start with, but when you think about it, we are not only composed of the same matter as the universe; we are also pretty much the most dynamic part so far discovered!


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:44 am
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My phone just died scrolling down that lot..


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:44 am
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Solar System? Pah!

the scale of the universe

I saw that for the first time last night. Impressively, it was done by 2 14yr brothers.

I preferred the other sea depth one - it swapped when I was about to post.

Removed as some bits were out of date, but here you go:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:46 am
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Posted : 26/02/2014 11:48 am
 Drac
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Long cat is no longer (HA!) as he was spoiling a good thread.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:49 am
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One thing I like to remember about the solar system is that The Sun is actually pretty small as stars go. If Betegeuse was at the centre of the solar system not only would the entire orbit of earth be contained within it, we'd be closer to the centre of the star than to its edge - which would be approximately at the orbit of Jupiter. Other stars are almost twice the size of Betelgeuse.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 11:49 am
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If you scaled up the atoms in a grapefruit to the size of blueberries, the grapefruit would be the size of the Earth. The nucleus of the atom would still be too small to see with the naked eye.

To be able to see the atom's nucleus easily, you would need to enlarge the atom to the size of a football stadium. The nucleus would then be the size of a small marble. Between this nucleus and the electrons is nothing.

Most of what we can see in the universe is nothing. Most of what the universe is made of, we can't see.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:13 pm
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Most of what the universe is made of, we can't see.

"Most" undersells it a bit really doesn't it? 95% of what the universe is made of, we can't see or directly observe in any other way.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:16 pm
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On the subject of depth:

For a minute there I thought the 'frightening looking' fish at 13,120 FT beneath sea level included the Fleshlight Fish.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:25 pm
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"Most" undersells it a bit really doesn't it? 95% of what the universe is made of, we can't see or directly observe in any other way.

95[b][u].1[/u][/b]%

🙂


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:30 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:32 pm
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That 'Farthest travelled by human beings' bit after the Moon, is that Pink Floyd then?


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:34 pm
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Its all a bit wild this existence lark... Even in our immediate surroundings we only see a minute slice of the full spectrum of the composition of the world around us; a bit like our sensory equipment is hardwired to receive just that which our limited processing potential can efficiently interpret.

Wonder how quick your brain would fry if we were exposed to the full depth of the matter that surrounds and binds us.

Blimey, I've gone all Jedi


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:34 pm
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but don't forget even after all this mind boggling scale - god still really doesn't like the gays.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:38 pm
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Wonder how quick your brain would fry if we were exposed to the full depth of the matter that surrounds and binds us.

As Slartibartfarst said when entering hyperspace "it scares the willies out of me".


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:45 pm
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a bit like our sensory equipment is hardwired to receive just that which our limited processing potential can efficiently interpret.

Or 'a bit like the fact that we've evolved to perceive the things we need to find food, shelter, a mate and to avoid threats'. But yeah, imagine being able to perceive stuff across the full EM and gravitational spectrum, then add dark hoo-haw into that and we'd all spend 99.9% of the time just oggling what was around us.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 12:46 pm
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Wonder how quick your brain would fry if we were exposed to the full depth of the matter that surrounds and binds us.

Into the Total Perspective Vortex!


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 2:55 pm
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I had to scroll right down to the bottom before I found somewhere I could afford to buy a detached house with off road parking.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 4:08 pm
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e are also pretty much the most dynamic part so far discovered!

...by us, that is. Who knows what's been discovered by the bits we haven't yet (knowingly and publicly confirmed to have) discovered...


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:24 pm
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what happened to that dog then?


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:30 pm
 rs
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arrrgggh! Don't start this one again! I always end up thinking even if there is an edge, there must be something on the other side and that must be contained within something as it couldn't just exist out of nothing, then I always think of the end of the MIB film and figure that'll do as an explanation!


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:35 pm
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what happened to that dog then?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_space_dogs

I think Veterok and Ugolyok went the furthest and they both survived


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:39 pm
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what happened to that dog then?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laika


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:42 pm
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Awesome thread!


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 5:45 pm
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Awesome thread!

Quite lidderally, mate.

Not hard to see why "god did it" is a popular explanation, the sheer scale of stuff (in both directions) is incredibly difficult for our little human brains to comprehend.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:09 pm
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I think current observations indicate that the universe is flat and goes on for ever in all directions.

In that case each of us can claim to be at the centre of our own universe.

Which is sort of comforting.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:16 pm
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It can't be flat [i]and[/i] go on for ever in all directions.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:16 pm
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Flat as in it doesn't curve back on itself.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:18 pm
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Now my head hurts.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:26 pm
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Check out the map on this page http://www.ursa.fi/tahtitieteesta/aurinkokuntamalli.html although it's in Finnish. The english link top right has info but no map.

It's a scale model of the solar system built across the city. The inner planets are all in the central park close to each other, the outer ones are miles away out in the suburbs 🙂


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:35 pm
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Posted : 26/02/2014 6:36 pm
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Or alternatively: http://www.york.ac.uk/solar/


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 6:37 pm
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In that case each of us can claim to be at the centre of our own universe.

I read somewhere that no matter where you might happen to be in the Universe, you'll still be effectively at the center of it.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 7:18 pm
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How Big Is The Solar System?

Which one?
http://www.nasa.gov/ames/kepler/nasas-kepler-mission-announces-a-planet-bonanza/#.Uw43dPl_v6c


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 7:57 pm
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I read somewhere that no matter where you might happen to be in the Universe, you'll still be effectively at the center of it.

You're always at the centre of your own [i]observable[/i] universe, as what you can see is the lights which has had enough time (13.798 billion years (±37 million years)) to reach you, which is a sphere centred on you.

What really messes with peoples heads is that the furthest distance you can see is 45.7 billion light years, and the lights from there has taken less than 14 billions years to get here 🙂


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 8:02 pm
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Space, the final frontier.
Which is also not only queerer than we think, its also queerer than we CAN think.


 
Posted : 26/02/2014 9:11 pm