• OhStopYellingAtMe
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    661 month ago

    To be fair, wind is also a form of solar power. (Wind being caused by the difference in heat between the different hemispheres/poles & the rotation of the earth)

    So wind & solar power are indirect & direct long-range nuclear energy sources, respectively.

      • @marcos
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        151 month ago

        Tides and nuclear power aren’t.

        • unalivejoy
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          191 month ago

          That comes from the energy from earth’s rotation. That energy is left over from the formation of the sun.

          • @zergtoshi
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            71 month ago

            Plus nuclear wouldn’t work without fissionable elements, which wouldn’t be here without supernovae aka dying suns.

            • @[email protected]
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              71 month ago

              Which is why we need to finally develop fusion, to free us from the tyranny of power of stellar origin!

              …if you ignore the fact that fusion is basically replicating what a star does, that is

              • @[email protected]
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                41 month ago

                “Watch and dispair, oh mighty stars, how we have enslaved your children to release us from your tyranny!”

            • @AA5B
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              21 month ago

              So nuclear power is not like solar at all…… it’s GALACTIC POWER! maybe COSMIC POWER!

              • @zergtoshi
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                130 days ago

                I suppose it depends on the definition, but yeah - GALACTIC POWER

                • @AA5B
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                  130 days ago

                  And you always need to say it in that booming overly enthusiastic voice. It works whether you’re a superhero or a supervillain

          • @the_tab_key
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            230 days ago

            Left over from the formation of the solar system, not the sun.

            • @Shardikprime
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              130 days ago

              Erm, the solar system formed because of the sun

              Where do you think that solar accretion disk went to?

              • @the_tab_key
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                230 days ago

                Erm, the sun was formed in the center of a nebula and the planets formed out of the remaining mass that didn’t collapse into the sun. Yes, the gravity of the sun influenced how the remaining mass interacted and formed into planets with rotation, but it is not wholly a direct result of the sun itself, rather the angular momentum of the original nebula.

              • @[email protected]
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                130 days ago

                lol this is so pedantic it’s mindbogglingly fun. I would argue you’re confusing “gravitational effects” with what people are describing as “the sun’s output from nuclear fusion”.