>game has asteroids/dwarf planets
>they're all bland and cratered rocks, virtually a clone of the moon
Hopefully, we'll see more diversity in the future.
Game has asteroids/dwarf planets
dude, Earth's moon is an actual fluke in astronomy
Is it?
yes
>too big for Earth
>created via planetary collision
>it's actually escaping Earth, 30m per year
OP's probably referring to the cratered appearance of the moon. Doesn't change the fact that he's a massive faggot, though.
but they are bland cratered rocks
>we need more diversity in games
Onions guzzling feminist cuck
This.
Just because Pluto is a dynamic body doesn't mean that every dwarf planet is like it.
For example, look at Ceres; boring as fuck.
It actually is
g a s p l a n e t s
imagine the smell
perfectly tidal locked too, ensuring we always see only one side of the moon
literally cleaner air than Earth
everything about the moon is a fluke and shits in mathematical probabilities and that's amazing as fuck
also makes me wonder how was Theia before it crashed with young Earth, because that planet was the source of most water in this planet
i tought it would smell like farts
>uranus smells like nothing
hehehehehehehehehe
Pluto should honestly still be considered a planet.
Dwarf planets are planets, too.
>game has a clear road for you to take
wtf what is this
a really messed up galaxy
スターロード
Everything going to shit
>Game developer makes one really good level.
>the rest of the levels are either empty or impossible to get to
What the fuck was he thinking?
>go out of bounds
>complain that there is nothing there
If the universe was made from the big bang why don't we have planets made purely out of explosions?
Checkmate atheists
we had but they exploded
Because entropy
Kenshi is on a moon
weird how most religions shit on the big bang theory when it was literally formulated by catholics as an interpretation for genesis
I recommend every single one of you that you buy a 70 dollars cheap telescope and see saturn and jupiter with your own eyes.
It's fucking awesome, I could just stare at them for hours.
can i use it to see uranus hehe
Ironically enough, catholicism is more science friendly than whatever is happening with christianism in USA. Evolution was accepted as an irrefutable fact amidst XXth century by the pope so I don't know what game are christfags playing over there.
Nope. It's actually too fucking far away and you'd need a very expensive telescope. Also what you'd see would be a very dim blueysh star, so I don't think it's really that appealing.
I already did that as a kid. Plus I think they aren't even visible at this time in the northern hemisphere. Venus is nice and bright though.
I wonder if Corona has dropped light pollution any, I know actual CO2 emissions have gone down.
Sometime I can't help but wonder what it'd look like if Earth was in a nebula.
Would we be able to see all the colors in the sky?
Would light be blocked by it?
Or on the countrary would it make everything perpetually bright as fuck?
Right. They appear during summer I think. And yes, i can see venus from my window very clearly for a very long time every evening since some weeks ago that I noticed.
>See weird flickering in sky
>Keep staring at it thinking it's a plane but it never moves
>Find out it's M3
>It's only been 2 days but M3 already feels like an old friend that only now I give attention to
How'd you find out it was M3?
I'd think nebulas are not just gas, it's mostly clusters of stars and other bodies that only appear or "cloudy" from a distance were all of them sort of merge into each other, but probably if you were standing in the middle of it, the actual matter would be too disperse to notice. But I could be wrong.
We'd be cooked alive, user. Nebulas are approx 10,000 degrees Celsius, that isn't even on the formation of a star. The reason they're bright is because they're ionized.
Oh well, what a shame, they're so beautiful.
Or you'd just get microwaved by all the reflected radiation. Space is a funny place.
Tidal locking is literally the one thing that's normal about the moon, any object that size, that close to it's parent planet would tidally lock to it
Beauty is better viewed from a distance than up close
First user is right, second user is wrong
The density of a nebula is still below what on earth is considered a laboratory grade vacuum
While some nebula have "technically" a high temperature, in practice this doesn't matter as there simply aren't enough atoms per volume to transfer this heat, going outside in a nebula would be no different from going outside anywhere else in space
if you're inside a nebula orbiting a G-class star, chances are everything in your vicinity will be G-class and lower as well, so no excessively massive radiation sources
Earth and the moon are beautiful anomalies. We just happened to have a star that's just the right heat, a planet that's in the right habitable zone, the correct planet with the best minerals to crash into our planet then to form both into Earth and into the Moon.
Anything about it is an infinite/1 chance of happening, let alone all of it.
Well even if you were in one what the fuck would you expect to see when they're hundreds of light years long?
Well, our moon is in the top 5 most interesting moons in our solar system
Actual position varies depending what's under Europa's and Enceladus' surface
Hundreds of light years of colors
very small chance of happening, but the universe is many times larger still
We're living on one of those lucky planets simply because we wouldn't exist otherwise
I never really thought about that, this is what it'd look like according to spaceengine.
I could dig it.
It'd beat complete darkness due to pollution
you know, I had the feeling this was the case, but I've never found anything about it in-game. They said the planets shown in the sky aren't meant to be taken seriously (I think they use a picture of Mars for one of them)
sigh, wish we had two moons
I want a ring.
is this turning into stealth space-engine?
>you'll never explore the universe and be the first to see another planet rise
A galaxy that has experienced a galactic merger/collision event. We've got pictures of all sorts of crazy galaxies these days.
Rings > Two Moons >>> Two suns
why are black holes so spooky bros
>you will never be the first man to step foot on a planet in the galaxy at the edge of the universal cube
what if it's actually canon that our universe really is a cube? could we handle such a revelation?
No dude that's freaky
>We've got pictures of all sorts of crazy galaxies these days.
Whirlpool galaxy has been a staple of deepsky objects for a long time now
w-what is the source of these red lights?
literally evangelicals who made shit up like the rapture
haha imagine being this galaxy, this one, lone galaxy that ended up so far beyond the edge of the universe
imagine being the civilization that looks out at the rest of the universe, seeing how much closer everyone else is to each other
haha that'd be pretty funny
They're RED SUNS
RED SUNS OVER PARADISE
the picture is taking partially into the IR spectrum, that's the red
astrophotography pictures depend heavily on what spectrum they're taken in
fear of the unknown
you hear shit about how our existence could possibly be an echo of ourselves imprinted on the edge of a black hole and it gets pretty spooky
Tidally locked planets seem pretty comfy
GOLDEN RAYS OF THE GLORIOUS SUNSHINE
SETTING DOWN SUCH A BLOOD RED LIGHT
You ever wonder if we're alone in the galaxy?
Though there is no way to prove the existence of ayys, I personally believe we're not alone.
Fun fact: as the universe continues to expand this is the eventual fate of ALL galaxies
eventually the universe will expand so wide and rapidly that the light of other universes cannot reach them anymore
if there are any lifeforms left they will look up at the sky and only see darkness beyond their own star system
to soothe existential dread, here's a nice picture of a planet going through it's carboniferous period
We're absolutely not alone.
But we'll never meet the others. Ever.
So I suppose we're functionally alone, unless we drill into Europa's oceans and find ourselves some fishy friends.
>carboniferous period
What's that?
A teenager planet?
This user knows.
>>it's actually escaping Earth, 30m per year
its actually 3 cm per year
NOW THE ANIMALS SLOWLY RETREAT
TO THE SHADOWS -- OUT OF SIGHT
yes
>Your planet doesn't have rings
ARID BREEZE BLOWS ACCROSS THE MOUNTAINS
GIVING FLIGHTS TO THE BIRDS OF PREY
oops
I knew it was something about a 3 but I didn't remember the exact number
thanks user
At least with the grand universe, if there are any others out there chances are we'll never meet them
But oceanfolk are the real fear, because they're just out back