AMAZING FACTS
POSTED BY: DEEPAK KUMAR

But
maybe it’s time to start paying attention to space again. Hell, Lance Bass and
Paris Hilton went there. How complicated can it be? As those who have kept in
touch with the cosmos will tell you, space is one damn interesting place,
chock-full of wacky phenomena. And you don’t even need to work for NASA to
understand it. In fact, if you ever find yourself stranded in space like the rag-tag crew of Earthlings in our
hilarious original retro SciFi series, “Space Hospital”, you might have a lot of fun getting to know the weird ins
and outs of the final frontier. Here’s a collection of interesting and
altogether weird space facts that you probably didn’t learn in school or even
on TV. So sit back, strap in, and get ready to go where few normal men have
gone before.
1. Quasars
These
mysterious starlike objects shine from the outermost limits of the universe,
helping scientists learn about the earliest stages of existence. We’ve since
learned that a quasar is actually a black hole at the center of a huge, distant
galaxy. Perhaps more interesting, quasars give off 1,000 times more energy than
the entire Milky Way galaxy.
2.
Lightweight Planets
You
may have learned that some planets in the solar system are gaseous, but did you
know that Saturn, that binged-out planet with all the rings, could float in
water? The planet’s density is 0.687 g/cm3 versus water’s density of .998
g/cm3. So Saturn would make an awesome rubber ducky in the universe’s largest
bathtub. If only we had a prodigal billionaire to help make that happen.
3. Liquids in Space
Here
on Earth, liquids tend to flow downward. But in the zero-gravity vacuum of
space, any liquid will shape itself into a sphere. It is surface tension, the
same phenomenon that causes water to form as a horizontal surface on Earth that
causes liquids to form spheres in space. Maybe frat guys should start paying
attention to this stuff. No doubt they could convince alumni benefactors to
send a crew of bro-stronauts up to research a new generation of drinking games.
4. Goodbye, Moon
Tidal
effects cause the moon to move about 3.8 cm away from Earth every year. It’s a
process called tidal acceleration, the aggregate of competing gravitational
forces between a planet and its satellite. As a result, the Earth’s rotation
slows down at about .002 seconds a century, and the moon casually inches toward
our sister, Venus.
5.
Old Light
Believe
it or not, the sunlight we see today is actually 30,000 years old. That’s when
the energy of sunlight was created in the sun’s core, and it has since then
been fighting to penetrate the dense matter of the sun. Once it reaches the
surface, the light takes only about eight minutes to reach us. Scientists have
confirmed that, due to its age, sunlight does in fact smell like old people.
6. Extra Moons?
In
1986, a scientist named Duncan Waldron discovered an asteroid in elliptical
orbit around the sun that seemed to mimic Earth’s revolution. Because the
asteroid appeared to be following our planet, it was sometimes referred to as
Earth’s second moon. Since then, at least three similar asteroids have been
discovered. Most recently, the Earth and the moon went on “Maury” to discover
that, as suspected, Earth is the father of those asteroids.
7. Cold Welding
In
space, pressing two uncoated pieces of metal will eventually fuse them
together. The Earth’s atmosphere coats metallic surfaces with a layer of
oxidized material, but in the vacuum of space, that layer barely exists. NASA
used to be hyper-sensitive to cold welding, so the metal used in many
spaceships is coated to prevent the reaction. But it takes more than a brief
bump for two metals to fuse in space, and in the 1960s the phenomenon of
instant, accidental cold welding was dispelled as a myth.
8. Extra Inches
All
human beings are about two inches taller in space. On Earth, gravity compresses
the spine, but in the vacuum of space, the spring-like spine is free to
elongate. Short astronauts are thus more confident pick-up artists when
floating around in space. The bad news? Back on Earth, they shrink back down to
normal height. Also, girls get taller in space, too.
9. Diamond Star
In
2004, astronomers discovered a star composed entirely of diamond, measuring
4,000 km across and 10 billion trillion trillion carats. 50 light years from
Earth, the diamond star is classified as a crystallized white dwarf, the hot
core that remains after a star burns out. Only recently have scientists been
able to study the contents of the white dwarf, and they’ve confirmed that the crystallized
carbon interior of the star is, in fact, the galaxy’s largest diamond. In other
news, Elizabeth Taylor is studying to become an astronaut.
10. Shrinking Sun
Solar
winds are streams of charged particles ejected from the upper atmosphere of the
sun that cause it to lose up to a billion kilograms of mass a second. For such
an extreme dieting regimen, the sun still looks pretty damn enormous.
11. Lasting Footprints
Due
to the absence of air and wind on the moon, all astronaut footprints last for
millions of years, longer than the most permanent structures on Earth. As long
as a meteor or any other space particle does not hit the moon, any impressions
made into its surface will virtually last forever. Just imagine all the penis
doodles the moon would wake up with if the aforementioned frat-boy excursion
were to go down.
12. Electrostatic Levitation
During
the first Apollo missions, astronauts reported a hazy glow on the moon’s
horizon that looked a little like an atmosphere. This was weird since, well,
the moon doesn’t have an atmosphere. The glow was actually the sun’s reflection
of floating dust particles. Because the sunlight gives an electrostatic charge
to dust particles on the moon, some particles float in the air, a process known
as electrostatic levitation. It’s just a matter of time until Criss Angel
claims the phenomenon as proof of his supernatural powers.
13.
Long Day
Amazingly,
a single day on Venus is longer than its entire year. It takes Venus 243 Earth
days to completely rotate on its axis, but just 225 days to orbit the sun.
Stranger still, Venus is one of two planets that rotates in reverse, a
phenomenon called retrograde motion. Most theories attribute the reverse
rotation to an ancient planetary collision. That’s what happens when you make
fun of Pluto’s mom.
14. Milky Way Satellites
Planets
in the solar system aren’t the only celestial bodies with satellites in orbit.
The Milky Way galaxy itself has at least 15 satellite galaxies in orbit around
it. Just as the moon is gravitationally bound to the Earth, these satellite
galaxies are gravitationally bound to the Milky Way, which lovingly refers to
them as “ma’ bitches.”
15. Cold Steel
On
the former planet Pluto (now designated a dwarf planet), the temperature is a
brisk -390 degrees Fahrenheit. Expectedly, temperatures become progressively
colder as you move away from the sun, and Pluto is about as far as you can get
within our solar system. In fact, it is so cold that Pluto’s ice is harder than
steel. Needless to say, your nipples can cut glass on Pluto.