• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    118 months ago

    Nasa is ruining every planet one-by-one. First pluto wasn’t a planet. Then neptune is even more boring and stupid than previously thought. Next thing we know, Mars isn’t a planet anymore because planets aren’t red.

    • Wugmeister
      link
      fedilink
      English
      98 months ago

      Technically the concept of a planet is a social construct. Scientists have been scurrying around redefining the definition of a planet to exclude asteroids ever since they discovered them. Why can’t they just say that the Earth is a wet asteroid and be done with it?

      • Liz
        link
        fedilink
        English
        38 months ago

        My personal definition of planet:

        1. big enough to be spherical
        2. has never been big enough to cause fusion
        • @Delusional
          link
          48 months ago

          I could see trump getting rid of NASA for his own space agency and he’d call it SASA. Super awesome space agency.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          48 months ago

          NASA comms office assistant tries to let off steam by visiting Lemmy, sees your comment, has flashbacks to the letters they read from Americans everyday

    • @omega_x3
      link
      68 months ago

      Well I mean why is Mercury still a planet? It didn’t clear it’s own orbit, it just happens to be in an empty orbit.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      48 months ago

      Venus isn’t a planet either. It’s a hell-sphere. But that makes it even more rad 🤘

      • @AngryCommieKender
        link
        2
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        A hell-sphere that would be easier to fix than Mars, which is an entirely different type of hell-sphere. Just toss in enough ice to make eventual oceans and some cyanobacteria, and it should calm down in a few hundred thousand years.

        Short of an artificial black hole at its center to raise the gravity, I don’t see how we could ever terraform Mars. There’s not enough gravity for anything that evolved here to be healthy there.

        • @afraid_of_zombies
          link
          28 months ago

          Maybe looking at it the wrong way. Mars becomes a place to visit. Turn it into an ecosystem full of stuff that can survive the low gravity. Insects and plants. You know after you stripmine it.

          Go visit the weird ass nature reserves from your spinning space habitat.

          • @AngryCommieKender
            link
            28 months ago

            That’s certainly an option, but right now it seems most space agencies are totally ignoring Venus as a possibility, and are focused on a Mars colony.

            • @afraid_of_zombies
              link
              18 months ago

              Well Mars colony would be easier at the moment.

              As much as I don’t particularly like the man I think Bezos was right. We already have a place with ideal gravity. The future should be orbiting colonies. Imagine processes that could be done under fully controlled conditions.

        • CaptBobbers
          link
          fedilink
          28 months ago

          @AngryCommieKender @root_beer
          Floating cities in the clouds of Venus mining carbon dioxide and nitrogen out of the atmosphere, sending all those excess gases to Mars, the Belt, and the moons of the gas giants for terraforming and habitats.

          Car Salesman: * slaps the Venusian atmosphere * “You can fit so many Martians under this bad boy.”