Is Mimas Hiding Pac-Man? 99
cremeglace writes "Shaped into the likes of the Death Star of Star Wars fame by the giant crater Herschel, 396-kilometer-diameter Mimas was expected to have its warmest surface temperatures on the equator, where it was early afternoon. Instead, it was warmest in the morning (all of 92 K), giving rise in the science team's temperature-calibrated color scheme to a very large Pac-Man."
Is Mimas hiding Pac Man? (Score:4, Funny)
yes, yes it is. Thanks for asking.
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"What's a Pacman?" - teenager
.
"What's an Eliza?" - ditto
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"What's a Pacman?" - teenager
"What's an Eliza?" - ditto
What's a ditto? Haven't seen that kind of teenager before.
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Nom (Score:2)
The crater looks like a pac-dot that he's about to eat.
And what's with all the questions for headlines recently?
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"Can you elaborate on why (ANSWER$) bothers you?" - ELIZA
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Why do you want to know?
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"I don't know the word why."
$PROGRAM END
$ERROR ON LINE 200
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Lordy, we can't even RTFS?
Or are you claiming you've never heard of Mimas [wikipedia.org]?
Please surrender you Geek Credentials NOW. Astronomy is not an optional affiliated specialization.
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Please surrender you Geek Credentials
Whereas, as every Geek knows, grammar is an optional specialization.
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So's personal hygiene. What's your point?
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Please surrender you Geek Credentials
Whereas, as every Geek knows, grammar is an optional specialization.
And in this particular case, I would say Greek Credentials.
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Typos != bad grammar. Of course, he could have just been speaking Ebonics, some of us nerds like learning foreign languages.
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Er, yes it is. This is a moon that looks like a space station, not the other way around.
Is Mimas hiding Pac Man? (Score:5, Funny)
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So THAT'S why it makes that sound: Sproik! Sproik! Sproik! I'd been wondering.
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Q*Bert?
well, thats an interesting image. You may want a Dr to check that out.
I always thought it much more of a "tube shooter" like Tempest or Torus Trooper
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tempest_(arcade_game) [wikipedia.org]
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Yes your right, I made a mistake. But what is it with Slashdoters/Geeks and not being able to explain yourself properly, that's at least as important as Grammar!
... and can wee ad "your" two you're list of gramar and speling ofences;
More importantly, explaining oneself rationally is a dying art - what is most important here and increasingly so in popular media is being charismatic and sounding like you know what you are talking about. This is why I think it very important that we all should make use of articles to prove our point on any subject. For instance, the current one about Pac-man and the Death Star posing on the surface of some far off moon no one will
My theory... (Score:2)
...is that this was meant to be an April Fools' Day hoax that was released early on accident. :^)
A better theory (Score:2)
Cmdr. Taco is hitting the sauce before the sun is over the yard-arm this morning.
I thought it was April Fools as well, but: (Score:2)
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NASA isn't in on it -- the robots we're using to explore are developing their own senses of humor.
The Google AI is laughing its posterior nodes off...
Cost per Bit (Score:1, Interesting)
They say the Cassini Program costs less -per bit of data sent- than an SMS.
If you've got some hard math on that, please post it.
Re:Cost per Bit (Score:5, Interesting)
No, there have however been discussion on the cost of the downlink from the Hubble space telescope: http://www2.le.ac.uk/ebulletin/news/press-releases/2000-2009/2008/05/nparticle.2008-05-12.4476906328 [le.ac.uk]
In essence, a sending data via text will give you bills for around GBP 350 per MB. The funny thing with this is of-course that sending texts is basically for the operator free of charge as it is only using excess capacity of the mobile networks, that is, text messages have no guaranteed delivery and will simply be dropped in case a link is congested. The only cost that texts infer are the operational costs with maintaining the servers that manages the texts, but you cannot expect that that will be a very high cost.
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I wish I could find some data on this, but I've always suspected that the largest cost comes from billing the customer.
Probably isn't true, but still fun to think about.
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I wish I could find some data on this, but I've always suspected that the largest cost comes from billing the customer.
That could easily be the largest part of the telco's cost.
Obviously the largest part of what they charge you is their profit-taking. Which is why it's oh so worth it for them to bill you for it even if billing was 100% of their costs. :)
Also, my understanding is that SMS uses empty space in synchronization packets the telcos already are sending as a matter of course (which is why the limit
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text messages have no guaranteed delivery and will simply be dropped in case a link is congested
WTF? I paid for that thing! I paid 3500 times the actual price! And they dare to not deliver it?? That’s called fraud, and will land them in court, if they ever try that on me!
Ok, I know that it’s about 3500 times the actual price, because I’m using an instant messenger on my phone, and I can send roughly 3500 messages of SMS size trough it, to get to the same price for the data, as a single SMS message would cost.
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If it is 'obligatory', it isn't funny.
Worst... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I disagree.
It grabbed your interest enough to go read the article, without giving you enough detail that you didn't need to read the article at all.
I'd say they nailed it. If all summaries were like this, we wouldn't have to say "RTFA!!" quite so much. We'd still have to say it, because a lot of people don't even read the summary, let alone the article, but every little bit helps.
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Surface composition? (Score:4, Interesting)
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My first thought was that it could be the shadow of that large crater keeping the area cooler. But I don't really know the scale of whats involved there, nor did I read the article :)
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Similar to my thought (Score:2)
like, I dont't know, something large smacking a crater into the surface? it's extremely likely they crater formation was not because an asteroid went straight in, but at an angle,
and HEY! maybe- just maybe (sarcasm not directed at OP) the same crater maker threw out some material from deeper beneath the surface- which was a different composition -and all around the crater.
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Angled impacts produce round craters. It's a bit counter intuitive but you can prove it to yourself with a bag of flour.
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Any ideas what could cause such a triangular boundary?
10 minutes in Photoshop. Perspective-correct straight lines across a curved surface are really, really, really rare.
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It still is an extremely weird shape for that, with that straight and rather sharp lines.
They aren't *that* straight or sharp; there's buldges and gaps and the point is pretty rounded. Not that it's directly comparable, but I've seen much more precise triangular shapes created in shale rock outcroppings.
Only thing that comes to my mind right now is that it looks like a bow wave, or a shock wave boundary.
Yeah same here.
It's fascinating, that's for sure.
If he eats that dot... (Score:2, Funny)
Will the neighboring satellites turn blue and change direction?
That's no moon (Score:5, Funny)
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And I was just about ready to fire a "Cue that's no moon in 3... 2... 1..." post!
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Weird that lost post just broke slashdot. Boy is the D2 getting buggy these days......
One eyed smiley face... (Score:2)
... you're just holding the picture at the wrong angle.
Summary is tc; cu (Score:2)
Too confusing; couldn't understand. So, what orientation does Mimas need to be in to make it early afternoon everywhere along the equator?
So that's where Pacman was hiding! (Score:1)
Date (Score:2)
If only /. allowed images (Score:1)
"Portion of this graph that looks like Pac-Man."
/. allows links... (Score:2)
This is not the droid you're looking for. [flickr.com]
Game over... (Score:1)
what a coincidence (Score:5, Funny)
The long-lost backstory on Pac-Man has its origins in space, too! Of course, every geek probably knows this already:
In 1976, Cosmonaut Nikolai Peckmann was sent alone to an orbiting space station for what would be called Mission Six- to study the radiation levels and strange circumstances that killed all four crewmen of the last research mission.
By the third day, Peckmann's broken transmissions were coming back to ground control filled with increasing paranoia and delusion. He claimed that the spirits of the dead cosmonauts were coming to claim him, and that he had to keep moving to evade them. He shouted that if he could capture consume these spirits himself while he still had strength, he could move to the next level of consciousness...Truly the rantings of an insane man.
Indeed, video recovered later would show Peckmann running around the confined but maze-like station, downing emergency sedatives like a madman....pausing in a corner momentarily, only to throw back vitamin pills and give chase to his invisible demons.
He had exhausted the entire cargo of vitamins, pills, and fresh fruit well ahead of schedule. There was no way another crew could be assembled to rescue him before he starved. After one rather violently garbled transmission, the static cleared and the last live image on record is that of Peckmann's empty, wilted spacesuit on the cabin floor.
It was determined that another mission to recover any remains or gather any more research would be a waste of the people's money, and the station was allowed to drift out of orbit and into space- a failure never to be mentioned again. It was ordered and assumed that all video and paper evidence had been destroyed.
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That's what they wanted you to think. The reality is, there was one more mission, spearheaded by either Peckmann's widow or possibly sister (her relation to Peckmann was always a bit of mystery due to the use of "Ms."). Unfortunately, Ms. Peckmann suffered the same fate. Ma
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How could you not link the pics? (Score:2)
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That's Travis' baby alright.
you think that's impressive? (Score:2)
just wait until pinky and clyde show up from around the side of saturn
Why is MeMaw hiding the game? (Score:2)
And seriously, why do they have tri-color on a temperature scale?
A quantity that has one dimension, such as temperature can be a graded scale of a single color and when you use purple and mauve and hot pink it simply confuses the interpretation. If you were trying to represent two or three dimensions of data then I could see that using RGB would allow quick interpretation of the data once an association was learned, however in this case it simply serves to obscure the
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Here's why [wikipedia.org]
Specifically: "Pseudo-coloring can make some details more visible, by increasing the distance in color space between successive gray levels."
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I can make a python script in gimp that translates a gray scale to color so I comprehend that data can be represented in many ways including adding dimensions by converting gray scale to a bump map.
My real question was whether the image actually imparted more information in the form of false coloring or if it made the matter more confusing like a term paper with so many different fonts that it looks like
Let me be the first to say... (Score:1)
That's just COOL! Too bad the writer of the article didn't know enough about Pac Man to realize that he's about to much on a Power Pellet and eat all the ghost-Thetans that are coming his way after liberation by the Scientologists!
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Omnomnomnom (Score:1)
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paradolia (Score:2)
This is obiously a message from pac-man that he wants us to be reminded of his eternal love. If every Jesus shapped food item has this kind of meating then that is the only conclusion I can draw.
Oh Drat (Score:2)
Cassini has put his thumb into the frame again.
Here it comes... wait for it... wait for it... (Score:1)
Now if this image is a representation of temperature difference, and the shape colored like Pac-Man represents a warmer area... one might say that Mimas has "Pac-Man Fever".
moons? (Score:1)
These aren't the moons you're looking for.
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