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The End Not As Near As We Thought 247
HiyaPower writes: "According to recent calculations cited by this article in TheAge, the calculations that the sun would expand to a red giant and engulf the earth are wrong. It will expand, but due to the loss of solar
mass over time due to the conversion of mass into energy, the earth will spiral enough further away thus avoiding the fate of Venus and Mercury. Personally I find this a great relief, I had some long term plans that I had been putting off..."
I wanted to move to Mars... (Score:4, Funny)
You really do have to wonder exactly why people do so much research into this.
Is there something they aren't telling us??
Re:I wanted to move to Mars... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is obviously assuming that we manage to not kill ourselves off beforehand, which remains questionable.
Long term is heat death of the universe, but if humanity survives those few quadrillion years then I think we'll have "succeeded".
Re:I wanted to move to Mars... (Score:2)
Aye, that's the truth.
we are totally and utterly dependant on that big ball
Sure, if the laws of numbers are broken and suddenly 67 is equal to 93. It's called an AU as well - and no, that doesn't refer to Australia.
Red giant... (Score:2, Offtopic)
I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
Exactly - a link is as strong as a single chain - and humans will only exist on earth while _all_ the required conditions for human existance remain. While this is cool science, it isn't very relevant for our survival as a species until we deal with some of our other niggling problems.
... like poisoning people for fun and profit [slashdot.org]
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:3, Informative)
When the polar ice caps melt, the ocean level does not rise. Why? because as ice they displace the same amount of space as they would if they were water. It is achimedes' principle. It is what keeps ships afloat, what makes submarines work. Consequently, melt ALL the polar ice caps and our friends in The Netherlands wont notice a thing.
This came from a piece of mistaken research earlier last century by the EPA, where they forgot this. It was an honest mistake, since owned up to, but that has not stopped it entering the public mind, and assorted do-gooders still using it for shock value.
One thing that can get us is if the ice on the Antarctic continent melts. This is possible, but highly unlikely. Ever opened your freezer on a hot day? Do you get more or less ice? That is probably not a concern.
So what are the possible problems? is the ocean level rising? Yes, it is. It rises naturally over time due to sedimentation processes, about 20cm/century, IIRC. The thermal expansion of water due to global warming (supposedly, see the ATOC project [ucsd.edu] for more info) is likely to add a similar amount.
One hopes to disillusion one more person every day....
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:1)
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
A freezer is not a self-containing system.
Try the same without external cooling system and you might get a better idea.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
This, of course, doesn't have to mean that the temperature in the polar regions will increase.
Here is a study Effects of Atmospheric Climate Change on Ice Stability [nasa.gov].
Another study of six Antarctic lakes has shown that the surface ice has thinned by up to 40 percent over the 80s.
(Wharton, R.A., Jr., C.P. McKay, G.D. Clow, D.T. Andersen, G.M. Simmons, Jr., and F.G. Love, 1992: J. Geophys. Res., 97, 3503)
Of course, you are free to interprete this as a sign of global warming, or not.
A different side on glaciers and sea levels from the U.S. Geological Survey [usgs.gov].
Of course, you are free to neglect this source, as they get their fundings for those news.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:5, Informative)
Oft stated, but actually wrong (even ignoring the fact that some polar ice is on land). When the ice melts it melts for a reason - the sea has warmed up. And when the sea warms it will expand. See this Nature Abstract [ciesin.org] or even from USA Today [usatoday.com]
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
Basically, there are so many factors here, it's impossible to say what will happen until it happens. I dunno... I'm not personally worried until the average temperature is up 50 degrees. Then I'll start freaking out. Until then, I just intend to do my little part and not worry.
-l
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
-l
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2, Insightful)
'Global warming' is merely a misinterpertation of the global tempererature shift required to enter a global ice age. Ice ages move slowly, and I would guess that this one will take another 1000 years to get up to speed with oceans warming enough to cause enough ice formation for continental ice sheets to form.
Your arguments remind me of the people who said the last tree would be cut down in 2001. Well it's 2002 now and I can see thousands of trees just from where I live alone.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
What on earth are you talking about? Evaporation from the oceans more than compensates for the expansion? Where exactly did you get this from?
Some numbers
Water in Ice = 1.7% = 24,000,000 km^3
All Fresh Water = 1.7% = 23,000,000 km^3
Water in atmosphere = 0.001% = 12900 km^3
Oceans = 96.5% = 1,300,000,000 km^3
(From Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather)
For a 1 deg C rise in average ocean temperature the change in density = 0.02%
Change in volume of the ocean = 260000km^3
or about 20 times as much as is currently in the atmosphere.
SO you are talking bollox here.
Giant Icesheets covering the land
Again - where did you get this from? Sea ice is melting; glaciers are retreating; premafrost is melting; the land icecaps are receeding. Somehow all this gets thrown into reverse as if the temperature increases more.
Your arguments remind me of the people who said the last tree would be cut down in 2001. Well it's 2002 now and I can see thousands of trees just from where I live alone.
My argument was that warm sea water takes up more space than cold seawater. If this reminds you of trees then I suggest you get your memory checked.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
No. The experiment that the post was eluding to is fill a glass with ice and water so the water is at the brim and the ice is floating. The ice will be above the level of the brim. Now let the ice melt. The glass is still full to the brim of water. This is Archimedes' principle.
This still applies - water is denser than ice. But the water in the seas is, on average, warmer than before. Therefore, if the polar ice cap melts it is because the sea is warmer. And if the sea is warmer then it occupies more volume, which means that sea levels have risen.
Oh, that's right you did mention something about "ignoring the fact that some polar ice is on land". Yeah, that little bit 'o ice, those mere GIGANTICE POLAR ICE CAPS resting on land masses couldn't possibly change sea level when they melt.
Sigh - even if there were no ice caps on land the sea level would rise if they melted: that was the point being made.
Many models of global warming predict that the land ice caps actually get bigger (due to increased precipitation) instead of melting- snow in is greater than meltwater out. Even with some extra water locked in the bigger icecaps the sea level still goes up due to the thermal expansion of sea water.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
South Pole is a different case. (Score:2)
Re:archimedes principle (Score:2, Insightful)
Consider a large iceberg. Say, 90% of it lies underwater, 10% of it above water. This is because it is (in my example) 11% less dense than water. But it still has the same weight as the amount of water taken up by the submerged portion of the ice berg. Find any physics text book, or perform the experiment mentioned in one of the other posts, put an ice cube in a glass of water, fill it to the brim and note the water level doesnt change when it melts.
Re:I wouldn't put too much hope in this (Score:2)
Things are getting better.
This is not worrying (Score:1, Funny)
At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:5, Funny)
He added that, although the Earth is safe from destruction, life here still faces some formidable challenges in the far future. The new calculations suggest that the surface of the Earth will become too hot to sustain human life for a few million years about 5.7 billion years from now.
This is about 200 million years later than previously thought - an extra period of grace that humans could use to develop technologies for living on a hotter Earth, such as building communities deep underground. Alternatively, the human race could move to another planet for a while.
[snip]
hard to imagine that after 5.7 billion years we'll still be worried about something as banal as the expanding sun. No, by then we'll have figured out a way to transmute our living soul into pure electronic energy and we will roam the cosmos, imortal and all-powerful.
Or we'll die out. How long did the dinosaurs live?
On the other hand, we may still be working the bugs out of the missile defense shield. Damn those decoys!
Sweat
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:3, Insightful)
Or we'll die out. How long did the dinosaurs live?
Well, the dinosaurs as a family lasted for over a hundred million years, but individual species didn't last anything like as long. Ten million years is a very respectable age for a species, though some become extince much earlier and others last much longer. Given our presence at the top of every food chain on the planet, we're in a rather vulnerable position because we could easily wipe out our food sources. I won't go down the doom route, but I'll simply say that it's _far_ from a foregone conclusion that humans will be around even a million years.
And there are no competitor species waiting around to take our place as articulate and intelligent tool users--apparently we outcompeted the nearest competitors in our niche. That's to be expected, and nothing unusual, but it does mean that worrying about piddling things like novae is a little silly.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2, Informative)
OK, I'll go down the doom route for you ;). Even if we assume that local effects (stability of the sun, earth, orbits of other planets) are predictable and non-threatening (big assumption in itself), the chances are very high that another large-body collision will occur before then (like the one that is theorized to have caused the dinosaurs' extinction event 65 million ago). Also, in round numbers, we've got about 25-30 more revolutions around the center of the galaxy... plenty of chance for interaction with other stars or extra-solar bodies. Then there's intergalactic interaction... I forget what the latest estimate is, but Andromeda (M31) is supposed to pay us a visit sometime before 5 billion years is out.
Or, some asshole will push the button, and we'll leave the roaches and telemarketers to ponder the whole thing.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
Move along...nothing to see here.
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy defines space as big...really big....really really big. You thought it was a long walk down to the corner store, well that's nothing compared to the vastness of space.
The thing that blows my mind about how big space is would be what you mentioned - two galaxies "colliding". There is so much space between the stars that when galaxies collide, they just pass through each other, nothing colliding.
Of course, gravity is a bitch, and galaxies that interact kinda revolve around each other, passing through each other multiple times, till they merge.
Ramble for the day.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
Foolish mortal...how constrained you are by what your senses show you. Know you not that your entire body is empty space, inhabited here and there by point masses called by your scientists "quarks" and "electrons"? Yet these point masses interact powerfully at short range.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
Given our presence at the top of every food chain on the planet, we're in a rather vulnerable position because we could easily wipe out our food sources. I won't go down the doom route, but I'll simply say that it's _far_ from a foregone conclusion that humans will be around even a million years.
I don't think it makes sense to talk about humanity as if it were just another species when it comes to extincton. What other species sets up farms? Sure, we may wipe ourselves out, but not in a manner even remotely similar to the ways that the dinosaurs or other species were wiped out.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
We could wipe ourselves out, sure. But we're just as likely, or perhaps more likely, to be wiped out in a global extinction event. There isn't a lot we could do about it. Escaping to space isn't an option, or at least, not as yet a realistic method of diversifying our habitats.
High intelligence gives us a fighting chance, sure.
But before that happened, I'd expect the species to decline naturally. We cannot assume that civilisation will remain the common, sustainable mode of human existence, or that our intelligence and civilisation will be enough to enable us to adapt indefinitely to whatever ecological changes we might encounter over periods of millions of years.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
The fossil record shows that the crocodile family has been subject to the usual flow of evolution and species extinction. You're mistaking a family for a species. We're not concerned here with whether there will be simians in n zillion years, but whether there will be humans. There are many species of simians, but only one of those species is currently human (all the other candidates are extinct). So the odds are fairly long.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
That appears to be a website devoted to some kind of quasi-religious belief in the transformation of humans to some kind of machine form. Whatever the result, I suspect that it would not be us, and it would certainly not be human. Interesting idea, though.
Yellowstone, aka "The Happiest Deathtrap on Earth" (Score:3, Interesting)
Despite being one of the most beautiful and spectacular exhibits of geology on earth, Yellowstone certainly is a scary place to visit. Just prior to when I was there, part of a parking lot had collapsed into the hell of boiling mud just underneath. It made me kinda nervous, since one normally doesn't think of the possibility that the ground will suddenly open up beneath you and send you to a horrible burning death.
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
I'd read this story before, but not since I was about 12. Funny that those molecular valves came about within decades of Asimov's story, rather than the centuries he predicted...
Re:At least we'll have time to prepare (Score:2)
Darn! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Darn! (Score:2)
Human Species (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Human Species (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah right.. Thats what they all say. You'll have to excuse me If I don't put too much faith in your predictions for the far future. I'm still trying to live with the dissapointment of reaching the year 2002 and not having a shiny foil suit, jet-pack, or flying car.
Re:Human Species (Score:1)
Well then - if they all say it's so, then it must be so. Haven't you heard of revisionist science and democratic rules with regards to the physical world?
Solar Output (Score:2, Interesting)
For those who haven't heard this one before (Score:5, Funny)
"Professor, earlier you commented that eventually the sun will collapse and life on earth as we know it will cease..."
"Yes," responds the professor, "but not for billions of years."
The young student exhales a sigh of releif. "Thank goodness, for a moment there I thought you had said millions."
And in lage friendly letters... (Score:5, Funny)
Those of us who have already seen the galaxy on 30 Altairian dollars a day agree...
It's not? (Score:1)
Re:It's not? (Score:2)
What do you mean, 'wait' and 'turn into'?
Not to be cynical, but... (Score:1, Flamebait)
This matters why? I mean, sure, they have to update the textbooks, but why is this worth researching, let alone newsworthy? Can this problem help us solve other problems that need to be solved?
Any astrophysicists mind?
Re:Not to be cynical, but... (Score:2)
Um, actually, this is the only problem that actually needs to be solved. What is the point of bickering over wellfare or crime or taxes or wars (or anything really) if we are going to go and cease to exist in the next 10 billion years? If the human species is goint to survive in the long term, then we have to plan in the long term.
Re:Not to be cynical, but... (Score:1)
The questions they're answering are more philosophical than practical. A lot of people would like to know where we and our world came from and where we're going. This is a stab at answering part of that.
Knowing that our planet will just barely escape the sun might also reinforce the sense that it's special somehow.
Re:Not to be cynical, but... (Score:4, Informative)
Any astrophysicists mind?
Well, as a budding astrophysicist (undergrad physics/astronomy major at UofA), planetary/stellar evolution is quite an important area of research (in fact, a whole branch of astronomy focuses on this. It's even a separate degree program at some schools--planetary science). Also, forgetting to account for the radiation of energy and the resultant decrease in mass seems to be a fairly major oversight, in violation of some of the most basic concepts of orbital motion, such as the fact that the downward force due to gravity (and, hence, responsible for the behavior of orbits) is proportional to the mass of the central object and inversely proportional to the radius squared. Decrease the mass, and the force decreases, resulting in a change in the dynamics of Earth's movement, and increasing the perihelion and aphelion.
This is worth researching because Earth and its fate is somewhat important to us, for reasons that should be obvious. This will help us model the evolution of the solar system up to the white-dwarf stage, one which will be reached by most main-sequence stars (we think).
Not only that, but there's tides... (Score:2)
While we're at it, did they also overlook tides?
Just as the tidal friction of the moon on the earth is accellerating the moon (gradually moving its orbit outward while slowing the earth's rotation while friction-heating the earth's core and thrashing the oceans and atmosphere), the earth's tidal friction on the sun should be gradually moving the earth's orbit outward, at a cost to the sun's angular momentum.
This is because in both the earth/moon and sun/earth system the orbit and central body spin are in the same direction, with the central body spinning faster than the orbiting body's period. Tides raise "bumps" on the central body, which (thanks to damping from friction) are carried forward with the central body's spin and produce an accellerating force on the orbiting body.
In the sun/earth case the sun's tides on the earth also transfer some angular momentum from the earth's spin to its orbit, increasing the effect. That doesn't happen with the moon, because the moon has already used up its angular momentum and is tide-locked with the earth.
Nothing compared to the effect on Jupiter, of course. But as long as the earth's orbit isn't in a harmonic relationship with that of another major planet the effect should be nontrivial and the interactions with other planets should inetgrate out to zip.
So, was that taken into account, too? If not, the start of the bake cycle could be even further into the future.
Re:Not to be cynical, but... (Score:2)
If you're anywhere in academia, then coming up with an insight you can publish after less than 6 months of work is a big thrill. Why does it make the news? Because most people have at least some interest in the fate of humanity; we care about our descendants. Oh, and most people are bad with big numbers and don't really understand how remote 5 billion years.
Future Entrepreneurs Take Note (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously though, 7.7 Billion years from now is a LONG TIME AWAY. I highly doubt that any life form higher than an insect will exist then in a form that we would recognize today. And while possibly providing insight into what planets orbiting other white dwarves we should look to for signs of past life (once we get equipment that can resolve their existance, much less probe their surface), I don't think this is anything anyone needs to worry about today.
Of course, assuming further checks prove that the Earth will survive past the death of our own sun, perhaps we should leave a legacy to the rest of the Universe by planting the sum knowledge of mankind somewhere safe below the surface (assuming we could sheild it from geologic destruction) and send out satellites to the furthest reaches of the galaxy proclaiming the gift to all Life, everywhere. Just be sure to pack this with some T-Shirts that read, "I went to Earth, and all I got was this lousy Data Crystal."
Slogan. (Score:3, Funny)
"Earth, what a tan!"
{this below a picture of George Hamilton}
I like this [google.com] picture or this [briansdriveintheater.com] one.
Re:Future Entrepreneurs Take Note (Score:2)
Any beings advanced enough to find, retrieve, and interpret it probably wouldn't gain much except perhaps insight into an ancient culture. We might give them a good laugh I suppose. Kinda like scratching "mankind was here" in the bathroom of the galaxy in very small letters. I think a better solution would be to create a whole bunch of spacecraft that fly around the Universe distributing this sum of knowledge.
Re:Future Entrepreneurs Take Note (Score:2)
Re:Future Entrepreneurs Take Note (Score:2)
Some advanced alien species takes it as a biological warfare invasion and returns to kill us all.
Space, nerds, math. (Score:2)
Why do I write? Read the quote below.
For decades, astronomy textbooks have insisted that the Earth will be engulfed in an inferno billions of years from now as the sun burns up its nuclear fuel and swells to become a gigantic red star.
You mean this is actually in the texts? I understand why someone would want to check and make sure that the earth isn't going to be burnt up in a nuclear inferno when they leave for work. Hell, check to see if we should celebrate New Years.
But when you are sitting there doing all that astronomical math, and you notice the number is higher than 10,000, why don't you just quit?
Leave the math for later generations.
I think I can trust them (Score:1)
I've problem trusting the research results from University major in sussing out sex
Btw, anyone would tell me why Englishmen had to build University around sex [mdx.ac.uk]?
(yes, it's a joke, take it easy)
hm... (Score:2)
Re:hm... (Score:2)
Re:hm... (Score:3, Funny)
What, are you kidding? Now thier whole "keep the courts busy until the Earth boils away into a fiery red giant inferno" strategy is all shot to hell...
i was worried.. (Score:2, Funny)
Simearth (Score:1)
this all sounds very nice but... (Score:1)
hyperspace travel. I do not know whats going to happen to this world tomorrow - if we humans dont blow up ourselves in the next one hundred years - then we might contemplate something billions of years away but still it would be nice to have old Earth when its time for my incarnation. Doh 4am and out of coffee -
And in the end... (Score:2, Funny)
-- anthony
Woohoo! (Score:2)
Wow, someone must have been very nice this past year.
20 Ways the World Could End (Score:5, Interesting)
(btw, I think 17 is about the present world.
Almost related... (Score:1)
7.7 Billion years (Score:2, Interesting)
Mr. Spleen
"That's what I call taking the LONG view..." (Score:4, Insightful)
We have gone from living at the mercy of the elements to building living environments in space in the span of only a few millennia, with the bulk of the technology being developed only in the last century. And now we stand poised to rewrite our own genome. Does anyone expect that, if mankind still exists five billion years hence, that it will be limited to this puny ball of rock, entirely dependent on this one yellow dwarf? Or that we will even resemble our current selves, either physically or intellectually?
Mankind may indeed pass through many cycles of near-extinction before the next million years pass. Look at our current speculative fiction. Scarcely anyone attempts to write about the future beyond a few thousand years, because we know it is beyond imagination.
Perhaps it would be best to say of stories such as this, that the Sun is still expected to continue, without substantial changes, for any conceivable lifespan of the human race as we now know it. Beyond that, we're whistling in the solar wind, for only God can know.
ask slasdot : linux stability (Score:1)
So where to go? (Score:2, Interesting)
I bet we'll waste the last drop of oil driving to McDonalds to get one of these new SpaceBurgers(tm)
Re:So where to go? (Score:2, Interesting)
The question is: do you stay out here in the 'real world,' or go into the the world that seems real in every way that this one seems real. You have a bit more security in this one, but hey, Jeri Ryan (7 of 9) is never going to be your girlfriend in this one, and you can't put Bill Gates on the rack in this one either. The virtual world could model this one perfectly, in all important respects, and perhaps you even get to be God or Q, but somebody will have to run the machine. You could still even communicate with outsiders via Internet, the Internet world being exactly the same whether you're carbon- or silicon-based. Sometimes I read /. postings that seem like they were written by bots whose language module only goes through 4th-grade level, and I wonder if some people haven't transitioned to virtual worlds, unbeknownst to the rest of us. If any /. users are already in virtual worlds, do respond. What's your particular world like? Are you a Q? Details.
And then again, perhaps I'm just too tired and should stop reading /. till all hours of the morning.
Re:So where to go? (Score:2)
Yeah, I miss college, and all of the good weed, too.
LV
Re:So where to go? (Score:3, Insightful)
while(true) {
grow(people);
while(count(people) > count(food))
kill(people);
}
Maybe your morals are just too great to allow those innocent people to die (or really, to never be born) because of lack of resources and space. Before we focus on building the massive spaceships you request, let's take notice that the population *already* exceeds the resources in many parts of the world.
Re:So where to go? (Score:3, Interesting)
Before we focus on building the massive spaceships you request, let's take notice that the population *already* exceeds the resources in many parts of the world.
Indeed, distribution is the main problem. We sit here and pay farmers to raise crops and let them dry up and die. Admittedly, many of these crops are not approved for human consumption since they contain alterations we consider safe for Food[tm] (i.e., cattle, sheep, etc.) but not for people (silly FDA vs Dept of Agriculture games). But the point still holds... distribution is the main problem, for political and economic reasons. Some countries hate us and don't want our food; others cannot afford the shipping costs. It'll work itself out eventually.
That population study in Nature is really good and holds with gut feelings a lot of us have had for years. If we can keep from some World Dictatorship, affluence will help the third world catch up and their populations will drop accordingly.
randomness,
-l
Mental instability (Score:2)
After 7 billion years, there will be absolutely nothing left to evolve, irregardless of whether evolution is a reality or not.
Re:Mental instability (Score:2)
True, but that's only a showstopper in a closed system, which Earth is not. Furthermore, we can leave
Re:Mental instability (Score:2)
Phew! (Score:1)
Oh Darn......Bloody YnK Problem (Score:2, Funny)
Watch them blame us poor programmers when all hell breaks lose......
Not now, but when? (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, if we plan on lasting that long I suppose it would be a good idea to colonize wherever possible. Mars and Venus seem like obvious candidates. Mars seems like a no-brainer but Venus would be the real challenge. Could we alter its orbit and the greenhouse effects in its atmosphere?
I think it is interesting that we expect that our own species will not last that long. I don't have any evidence for our longevity, but consider that we are the only species that we know of in Earth's history that is intelligent and uses tools to survive. We are the only species that we know of that significantly changes our own environment to suit us and we're the only species that can reach beyond our planet. It would seem already that we are a statistical anomoly.
Re:Not now, but when? (Score:2)
A planet is an amazingly inefficient place to live in terms of habitable surface area, energy required to leave its gravity well, wasted resources beneath your feet, etc. In fact, the Earth -- after the other planets -- will most likely be "dismantled" by our future selves in order to reassemble its raw molecular material for more useful purposes (like landfill in the ringworld(s) :)
--
Nobody will do anything. (Score:2)
So I have to laugh when I see people suggesting that the human race will carry out these wild survival plans that require 200-300 million years for their execution. Nobody will act on a threat from the sun even when it's a million years off, because nobody seriously worries about what's going to happen to their descendants that far in the future. If the sun were even going to explode in a thousand years, you would still be hearing guys on radio talk shows flatly denying that we should do anything involving any sort of personal or national sacrifice.
Re:Nobody will do anything. (Score:2)
First of all, my momma didn't raise no idiots. Second, your example shows that you didn't read the post you're responding to. My ancestors built a society with infrastructure that I benefit from, that's true, but to suggest that their own efforts did nothing to enrich their own quality of life during their lifetimes strikes me as a little naive.
[I deleted the part about global warming- it was a bad example anyway, since the threat is immediate enough to eventually affect people alive today.]
You also list DEPLETION OF FOSSIL FUEL RESERVES. I guess you haven't noticed the fact that these are generally under the control of a PRICE SYSTEM that takes into account such depletion as it happens, when it happens, and communicates that depletion rapidly over the entire planet's population, requiring no special translation into anyone's "native language"? That's taking ACTION, my friend, whether it fits into your narrow little worldview of what constitutes ACTION. (Which I guess probably is only "pass a buncha laws regulating daily human behavior", eh?)
This shows how well you've been brainwashed. The country is full of wanna-be conservatives who believe that the free market is the cure for everything that ails the world. (I say "wanna-be" because real conservatives aren't dumb enough to believe their own propaganda. A real conservative knows when to dump his dogshit stock and leave his wanna-bes like you holding 401k accounts full of dogshit.) In the case of fossil-fuel reserves, the free market only goes so far. As the cost of oil goes up, more and more oilfields become profitable to use, so the supply increases to meet demand. This doesn't mean that the reserves are somehow an infinite resource. The system is going to constantly move toward a final state where the rate at which oil is consumed equals the rate at which it is created. When this happens, the cost of a gallon of gasoline will have risen to astronomical levels, entirely due to free market forces. Most people would describe this as "no more oil". You can debate and say this won't happen in our lifetimes, and you'd be right- it won't. But it will certainly happen before the sun explodes, definitely within 1000 years.
I should also like to point out that you aren't my friend.
And OVERPOPULATION? Are you NUTS? The biggest problem with Western Civ today may well be the fact that it is DECLINING IN POPULATION. That's right, what happens when people become educated, wealthy, free, and respectful of laws and property rights, is they STOP INCREASING THEIR POPULATION. Every time.
Did you think I was directing some attack at you personally, or at any specific country? The world is bigger than the U.S.A., and overpopulation is generally not considered a problem in the West because it isn't one. (We're educated/wealthy/free/fat/happy here.) The issue centers around places like China and India. Do you see any solution to the overpopulation in India?
That's why people like YOU are the biggest threat to humanity's survivability. You refuse to accept the fact that people are, everywhere, ACTING on their own initiative to insure THEIR and their offspring's survival, and since you don't particularly like their actions and hate the steps they take (e.g., drive their children around in SUVs, which are SAFER and do jack-squat to the environment compared to any other vehicle worth driving), YOU are the sort of person who will use FORCE to IMPOSE YOUR WILL on them, REDUCING their practical ability to SURVIVE whatever comes down the pike.
This paragraph is full of laughs. The quote that SUVs "do jack-squat to the environment compared to any other vehicle worth driving" is my favorite. Did it have the American flag already on it as an option when you bought it?
I'd rather let those "guys on radio talk shows" you claim "flatly deny we should do anything involving any sort of personal or national sacrifice" rule than someone like YOU. At least they let EACH of us decide WHAT we will sacrifice, WHEN we will sacrifice, HOW we will sacrifice it, based on what WE each think is best for humanity as WE see it, compared to someone like YOU, who insists everyone march to YOUR silly little tune.
Dude, I was only making an abstract point about how it's human nature not to act on a threat that's more than 100 years away. I'm sorry if I insulted your personal God somehow, since you seem to have really taken this personally. I have a suspicion though that if Rush was president, the situation wouldn't be as rosy as you imagine.
What's with all the capitalized words anyway? Can't you express yourself in writing without resorting to shouts?
We don't have 7.5 billion years (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem is, that's not the time limit we have to deal with - we have to start the process before we run out of readily available resources and before we destroy our civilization (or an asteroid or whatever does it for us). If civilization is destroyed, the survivors will have a lot harder time bootstrapping themselves back up to our level because much of the easily mined resources may have already been used up and what's left takes a certain level of technology to get. If they need the technology to get the resources, but need the resources to get the technology, they're checkmated.
An optimistic guess is that we have a few hundred years to get our act together and get off the planet. A pessimistic guess would be that it's already too late. I think we've got 50 to 100 years, but that's a short time to learn to live in space and get a critical mass of self-reproducing culture and techology up there. We should have done more than we have. We need to start soon. There may be only one chance and this may be it.
Also a 100MY deadline (Score:2)
So far so good, but there's little CO2 left to remove from the atmosphere. As it continues to drop, we'll lose trees. No trees, no wood for construction projects. A bit latter, we'll lose even bushes and shrubs - the only form of plant life will be grasses.
Over an even longer timeframe (250 MY?), we'll hit a "wet greenhouse" phase. Hot oceans release more water vapor, which initially produces clouds that reflect sunlight. But this only goes so far, eventually the "water vapor as greenhouse gas" effect will dominate the "water vapor as bright white clouds" effect and the oceans will boil. This eventually leads to a "dry greenhouse" like Venus.
I'm not sure whether I'm optimistic (I think our window is much wider than you), or pestimistic (if we fail as a species, our successors may not have enough time to evolve.)
It's okay (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It's okay (Score:3, Funny)
Life, The Universe, and Everything clearly states this will happen in the year 198-.
This is the earth Mk 2!
Unnecessary (Score:2, Funny)
Give a man a fish and he eats for one day. Teach him how to fish, and though he'll eat for a lifetime, he'll call you a miser for not giving him your fish.
End may be closer than we think? (Score:2)
I remember watching on TLC, and reading subsequently, that the earth's magnetic field is degrading by half every 1600 years. Geophysics isn't my strong suit - Can anyone lend any supporting/debunking information?
Just what we need to hear... (Score:2)
I have been living my life knowing that all the evidance would incinerated.
Now earth will float around the universe forever as an icy tomb waiting to be dug up, until some alien race finds it and gets pissed enough at human beings to cut earth v3 out of dvd region 1 or somthing.
You think they could of told us this before we voted for Reagan.
Does the center of gravity actually change? (Score:2)
Why would this scenario be any different?
What's even more curious is what happens to matter's ability to attract other matter when the matter is converted to photons? Does the ability to attract matter vanish when matter transmutes to photons?
Re:Does the center of gravity actually change? (Score:2)
Quite true, as long a all the matter is inside
the sphere of the earth orbit the gravity will
be the same. However once it is a long
distance outside that sphere it ceases to have
any effect.
According to general relavity, the attractive effect
of gravity comes from not matter but energy,
(actually the source is called the Energy Momentum
tensor, and includes pressure as well). So photons
from the sun have exactly the same effect as the
matter of the sun. However once the light has
passed into deep space the gravity reduces.
Alternate thought (Score:2, Insightful)
My personal favorite quote... (Score:2)
The space rock 2001 YB5, identified by the arrow, could have wiped out France, according to a scientist in Britain.
Would the British really be all that upset about that?
Re:at least someone's keeping track. . . (Score:2, Funny)
Yes, I am exaggerating for humorous effect. I'm sure that, 7 billion years from now, they'll be very close to releasing Mozilla 3.0.
IE, on the other hand, will be up to IE 73,033,075.1, will take up approximately 300 petabytes of storage, and will have a security flaw which will give hackers root access to your machine before you even pop the CD into the tray.
Intel will be destroyed as a corporation after their experimental 27 quintillion transistor processor goes critical, destroying both their research facility and half of North America. Overclocking enthusiasts will then be rounded up and shot for the safety of mankind.
No one to blame but ourselves (Score:2)
Slashdot is certainly not perfect, but it's got one big advantage over TV, newspapers and magazines: most of its content comes from the readers. The ones who run this circus get a few sentences to try to tell us what to think (or what to think about), but then the readers take over. If Slashdot sucks, its our own fault. If we want it to be better, it's our own responsibility to make it so. You don't get that chance with TV, newspapers, or magazines. If they suck, you're stuck with it.
Used to be you could take your business elsewhere, but now they all song the same song.