That was funny! Stupid reporters at the dinner better laugh.
http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attractions-g187069-Activities-Manchester_Greater_Manchester_England.html
Greater Manchester's a great city. (If you like cities). Plenty of industrial archaelogy. Nightlife. Museums. Art galleries. A major part of the BBC is located there. Manchester United FC. Manchester City FC.
I'd recommend The Royal Exchange theatre (in the round), Museum of Science and Industry, The Lowry, The Comedy Store, Whitworth Art Gallery.
Very easy to get from Manchester to London by train or coach. Though the airport is located well out of the city, there are naturally easy and frequent transport links to and from it.
But then, it's a very long time since I was last there. And I can't say I miss the place. And I wouldn't call it a beautiful place - but I don't like cities anyway.
Coaches are cheap and nasty. National Express and Megabus. Train is fast and nice but you have to book in advance. 76 quid on the gate but 12 quid if you book now for june.
That was funny! Stupid reporters at the dinner better laugh.
Is there public transit from the airport to the main train station so that I could jump off the plane, get right on a bus, and then on a train, and end up in London that day? Would you recommend a train from London to Amsterdam or Paris, or is flying better?
Odd.![]()
Why does the Sun not bulge at the equator, like other stars and the Earth do?
It doesn't?
Apparently not. Though I've only just read it. In some book or other. So I've not checked it out, yet.
http://io9.com/5935742/its-official-the-sun-is-the-most-perfect-natural-sphere-ever-measured
Odd.![]()
Isn't it just?!
I'm intrigued.
And it's period of rotation is ~26 days. So it should bulge quite a bit, I think.
Well maybe it's because the sun takes a month to revolve. I know buldges are due to centrifigal force due to rotation, maybe the sun rotates slowly enough that the buldge doesn't happen. I am not sure if a monthly period is fast or slow for a star though.
No. I don't think it's that. I think astronomers were expecting to observe more oblateness than there is. They don't seem to have an explanation for it yet. But I'd guess it shows something about the internal circulation.
Yeah, the even horizon is just the point in which light cannot escape.
I was talking more about the singularity at the center of the black hole, which I assume is the object that is creating the absurd gravity that is a black hole.
Do European bus companies treat you better than the American ones? I think livestock get better treatment that I do while on the Megabus.