Today I Learned #4: Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.

Status
Not open for further replies.
TIL that there are some good bits of space:

Ten thousand light years from earth in a constellation far, far away, there is massive cloud of alcohol. It’s space booze.

Discovered in 1995 near the constellation Aquila, the cloud is 1000 times larger than the diameter of our solar system. It contains enough ethyl alcohol to fill 400 trillion trillion pints of beer. To down that much alcohol, every person on earth would have to drink 300,000 pints each day—for one billion years.

It wasn’t spilled after some Martian keg party [scientists claim, but were they there?]. As new stars heat up—formed as clouds of gas and dust collapse—ethyl alcohol can attach to specks of floating dust. As the dust moves toward the budding star, the alcohol heats, separates, and turns to gas. For astronomers, these alcohol clouds can be a telling clue into how our biggest stars form.
eso0924e.jpg
 
TIL that there are some good bits of space:

Ten thousand light years from earth in a constellation far, far away, there is massive cloud of alcohol. It’s space booze.

Discovered in 1995 near the constellation Aquila, the cloud is 1000 times larger than the diameter of our solar system. It contains enough ethyl alcohol to fill 400 trillion trillion pints of beer. To down that much alcohol, every person on earth would have to drink 300,000 pints each day—for one billion years.

It wasn’t spilled after some Martian keg party [scientists claim, but were they there?]. As new stars heat up—formed as clouds of gas and dust collapse—ethyl alcohol can attach to specks of floating dust. As the dust moves toward the budding star, the alcohol heats, separates, and turns to gas. For astronomers, these alcohol clouds can be a telling clue into how our biggest stars form.
eso0924e.jpg
I guess that explains the Star Trek episodes where the crew gets drunk from a virus that acts like alcohol.

I'm surprised that a science article would refer to something being "in" a constellation. Constellations are pictures made up by humans when our brains perceive patterns among the stars. Constellations change over time as stars change their positions in the galaxy (ie. the Big Dipper didn't always look like a dipper, and some day it will no longer look like a dipper), and while some of their stars may be relatively close together, some are hundreds or thousands of light-years away from each other and not traveling remotely in the same direction. Their only relation is how we perceive them, and if we were to go to a planet in a different solar system, we would see different constellations.
 
TiL Rick Astley's Never gonna Give you up has 1,128,334,351 views
That's a lot of Rick Rolling.
 
How the Waistband Got Its Stretch

THE NEW YEAR HAS arrived, and if you’re like me, you’ve promised yourself a slimmer, fitter and healthier you in 2022. But in the meantime there is the old you to deal with—the you who overindulged at Thanksgiving and didn’t stop for the next 37 days. No miracle diet or resolution can instantaneously eradicate five weeks of wild excess. Fortunately, modern science has provided the next best thing to a miracle: the elasticated waistband.

Before the invention of elastic, adjustable clothing was dependent on technology that had hardly changed since ancient times. The Indus Valley Civilization made buttons from seashells as early as 2000 BC.

The first inkling that there might be an alternative to buttons, belts, hooks and other adjustable paraphernalia came in the late 18th century, with the discovery that rubber wasn’t only good for toys. It also had immensely practical applications for things such as pencil erasers and lid sealants. Rubber’s stretchable nature offered further possibilities in the clothing department. But there was no word for its special property until the poet William Cowper borrowed the 17th-century term “elastic,” used to describe the expansion and contraction of gases, for his translation of the Iliad in 1791: “At once he bent Against Tydides his elastic bow.”

By 1820, an enterprising English engineer named Thomas Hancock was making elastic straps and suspenders out of rubber. He also invented the “masticator,” a machine that rolled shredded rubber into sheets for industrial use. Elastic seemed poised to make a breakthrough: In the 1840s, Queen Victoria’s shoemaker, Joseph Sparkes Hall, popularized his invention of the elastic-
gusset ankle boot, still known today as the Chelsea Boot.

But rubber had drawbacks. Not only was it a rare and expensive luxury that tended to wear out quickly, it was also sticky, sweaty and smelly. Elasticized textiles became popular only after World War I, helped by the demand for steel—and female workers— that led women to forego corsets with metal stays. Improved production techniques at last made elasticated girdles a viable alternative: In 1924, the Madame X rubber girdle promised to help women achieve a thinner form in “perfect comfort while you sit, work or play.”

The promise of comfort became real with the invention of Lastex, essentially rubber yarn, in 1930. Four years later, in 1934, Alexander Simpson, a London tailor, removed the need for belts or suspenders by introducing the adjustable rubber waistband in men’s trousers.

The constant threat of rubber shortages sparked a global race to devise synthetic alternatives. The winner was the DuPont Company, which invented neoprene in 1930. That research led to an even more exciting invention: the nylon stocking. Sales were halted during World War II, creating such pent-up demand that in 1946 there were “nylon riots” throughout the U.S., including in Pittsburgh, where 40,000 people tried to buy 13,000 pairs of stockings.*

DuPont scored another win in 1958 with spandex, also known under the brand name Lycra, which is not only more durable than nylon but also stretchier. Spandex made dreams possible by making fabrics more flexible and forgiving: It helped the astronaut Neil Armstrong to walk on the moon and Simone Biles to become the most decorated female gymnast in history. And it will help me to breathe a little easier until I can fit into my jeans again.

*Americans do love a good riot.
 
Sydney Poitier died at 94

In the Heat of the Night is worth watching, Rod Steiger was good too

The Defiant Ones, Guess Whose Coming to Dinner, Lilies of the Field, and Blackboard Jungle just to name a few
 
By 1820, an enterprising English engineer named Thomas Hancock was making elastic straps and suspenders out of rubber.
According to the people who created the computer game I've been novelizing for the past three years, suspenders were around in the year 1039 CE, the year that game is set in. We see Duke Edvar Ulmer's corpse on the floor of his study, wearing suspenders.

I plan to find another way for His Grace to keep his pants up. I can tapdance my way around quotes from Shakespeare and Little Red Riding Hood, but I'm not willing to let suspenders stay.
 
@Valka D'Ur: before elastic materials came along, suspenders were sold in different sizes, like clothes or shoes.
 
@Valka D'Ur: before elastic materials came along, suspenders were sold in different sizes, like clothes or shoes.
They make this character look like he stepped out of a Bonanza episode, when he's actually an AU version of an English duke from the 11th century. As mentioned, this isn't the only anachronistic thing about this game.
 
TIL the denomym for people from Botswana is "Motswana" for the singular and "Batswana" for the plural. According to Wikipedia, in Bantu languages, the plural prefix for human nouns starting with mu- is ba- . "Muntu" means "person" or "human", "Bantu" means "people" and was used by 19th-Century German linguist Wilhelm Bleek to encompass one of the big language families of Sub-Saharan Africa. The page that lists Bantu languages goes on and on and on... I'm still scrolling... and on and on... still scrolling... There's at least one that I've heard of: Xhosa, which is what Chadwick Boseman and John Kani were speaking to one another in Captain America: Civil War. Kani is a native speaker of Xhosa. (MCU trivia for nerds: In the flashback scenes in Black Panther, the young T'Chaka was played by Atandwa Kani, John's son. No idea whether he's fluent in Xhosa.)
 
TIL that electricity is more expensive than petrol, even in the UK were electricity is subsidised and petrol is ~60% tax. I guess I should have known, all the info is out there, but I am surprised and we should probably do something about it.

1 litre of petrol provides 34.2 MJ (9.5kWh) for a cost of approximately £1.43, With current electricity prices that same (9.5kWh) amount of energy costs over £2 even charging at home and well over £3 charging at ASDA [electric car charging points].​
 
TIL the US government is still holding 39 people at the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and is spending $540 million a year to do it. (The Biden Administration is preparing to release about a third of them, but I don't know how much that will reduce the overall costs of operating the prison. And of course it doesn't make it any more ethical.)

---
TIL that electricity is more expensive than petrol, even in the UK were electricity is subsidised and petrol is ~60% tax. I guess I should have known, all the info is out there, but I am surprised and we should probably do something about it.

1 litre of petrol provides 34.2 MJ (9.5kWh) for a cost of approximately £1.43, With current electricity prices that same (9.5kWh) amount of energy costs over £2 even charging at home and well over £3 charging at ASDA [electric car charging points].​
I also heard recently that the fossil fuels used in making an electric car are substantial. You have to drive an electric car for a bit before you start even taking a bite out of the carbon emissions from building it. Up to a point - and I'm not sure exactly where that point is - buying a used, gas-powered car is 'greener' than buying a new EV.
 
Last edited:
TIL the US government is still holding 39 people at the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and is spending $540 million a year to do it. (The Biden Administration is preparing to release about a third of them, but I don't know how much that will reduce the overall costs of operating the prison. And of course it doesn't make it any more ethical.)
maybe they are holding it open for the Trump family to occupy; The nice weather is similar to Florida. :)
 
TIL: While cloning in mammals is really hard, it might be impossible in birds. For cloning to work, you need to clean the genetic material out of an egg cell and put new one in. Since the egg yolk is sooo big, scientists have problems finding the DNA in it and removing it. Starting simply by the fact that you can't get it under the microscope.
Very interesting.
Link: https://www.audubon.org/news/the-surprising-reason-scientists-havent-been-able-clone-bird-yet
 
Til about this

The world really sucks. Imagine being ok with scamming thousands of people, with a theory like that.
How about a brief summary?
 
NESARA was relevant 15 years ago, maybe.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom