• @[email protected]
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    -827 days ago

    Not really. The only word in that whole tweet which is technically incorrect is “already”

    • @Chocrates
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      1627 days ago

      The moon doesn’t produce light, it is reflecting sunlight, so in my opinion the first statement is incorrect

      • @bisby
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        227 days ago

        But if the moon wasn’t there, there would be no light reflected. Doesn’t matter the source, we have light at night because of the moon

        • @SpaceNoodle
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          927 days ago

          And where does the light come from?

            • @Glytch
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              327 days ago

              Nuclear fusion is the ultimate example of teamwork

          • @bisby
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            113 days ago

            I would hope the whole thing is a joke in general.

            “The sun gives us light when it’s ‘already’ bright” is where the real logic breaks down. “I don’t need <thing> because I already have <benefit from thing>” is circular logic.

            So of course we wouldn’t have sunlight at night without the sun. but we also wouldn’t have sunlight at night without the moon.

            Whether we want to call it “more useful” than the sun… it is just as useful as the sun at night. We need both of them for the system to work. I was just trying to snarkily emphasize that we shouldn’t downplay the moon because it is “just” reflecting sunlight.

            • @SpaceNoodle
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              113 days ago

              Yeah but I could just put a big mirror up there and it would be better

              • @bisby
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                113 days ago

                You could put a big flashlight up in place of the sun and it would be better, or something. I dunno lol

                • @SpaceNoodle
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                  113 days ago

                  And who’s gonna change the batteries? Checkmate

          • Karyoplasma
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            26 days ago

            Well, the energy comes from the proton-proton chain which collides two protons, forming a deuterium core, a positron and a neutrino. The positron almost instantly annihilates with an electron, creating a gamma ray of energy. The deuterium core then collides with a second proton, forming helium-3 and releasing another gamma ray in the process.

            How the actual sunlight forms, I don’t know tho. It has something to do with the neutrino carrying energy to the protosphere, but what happens there, dunno.