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

        My brother, that explanation is not nearly dumbed down enough and as with most math wiki is useless for eli5 stuff.

        • @mkwt
          link
          English
          433 months ago

          I think a lot of people understand the concept of light-seconds, which can measure distance in seconds.

          Allow me to introduce the gravity-second. 1 gravity-second of mass-energy is enough mass-energy to have a Schwarzchild radius of 2 light-seconds.

            • @davidgro
              link
              English
              333 months ago

              Size of a black hole.

              Certain mass = certain distance

              Distance = seconds

              Therefore mass = seconds

                • @davidgro
                  link
                  English
                  93 months ago

                  You most certainly don’t, that’s a radius of about 300km (186 miles) and a mass of 101 suns.

                  Even if you meant microsecond, that’s 1/10 of the sun, and would be very disruptive.

          • @stoly
            link
            English
            43 months ago

            That’s elevensies.

            • @Buffman
              link
              English
              13 months ago

              ¿Porqué no los dos?

              • @stoly
                link
                English
                13 months ago

                Es un chiste que existe solamente para hacer una referencia al señor de los anillos.

  • @Limonene
    link
    English
    393 months ago

    Rocket scientists be like:

    Fuel efficiency: seconds.

  • @someguy3
    link
    English
    233 months ago

    Fun fact: Seconds are called seconds because the first breakdown of an hour is the minute, and the second breakdown is the second. Don’t ask me the obvious question(s) because I don’t know.

    • @f314
      link
      English
      18
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      If by obvious question you mean “why is it called a minute,” that is because “minute” means “small.” So you have the first minute (small) part and the second minute part of the hour.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        9
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        Well the one I knew spent his free time doing community theater, having many of the women there go crazy over him (he was good-looking and charming), and then not sleeping with any of them because he was a wait-until-marriage religious guy. I don’t think he was typical.

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

          I intended to be an astrophysicist before finally settling on IT, and I was doing theater before life did its things and I had to stop. I’m kinda religious but not THAT religious (and my SO is an atheist so, really not THAT much).

          Maybe there’s kind of a type anyway.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      8
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      There are two possibilities I can think of:

      • Orbit duration can be used to calculate mass
      • The diameter of a star or the parallax distance on the sky (in arcseconds) can also be used to evaluate mass
          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            13 months ago

            I’m no astrologer but from what I’ve learned, we also need to look at the color to glassify stars into categories. It varies a bit though in each category so it’s a blunt tool.

            Then there are other objects like gas clouds and even galaxies. For those, we have no idea of the density distribution, so radial size gives us even less info.

    • @Gonzako
      link
      English
      13 months ago

      The amount of time a mass M attracts a unitary sphere up into CoM.

  • IndiBrony
    link
    English
    203 months ago

    Me: not smart enough to understand

    Brain: Quick! Say something to sound like you fit in!

    Me: uh … I just did the Kessel Run in under 12 parsecs!

  • observantTrapezium
    link
    fedilink
    English
    173 months ago

    That may be relativists (they would actually measure anything in units of mass, with everything else defined through G = c = 1). Astrophysicists commonly measure mass in solar masses, long distances in parsec (or kiloparsec, megaparsec), short distances in solar radii or AU, and time in whatever is relevant to their problem (could be seconds or gigayears)

    • @Sconrad122
      link
      English
      123 months ago

      short distances in solar radii

      I think astrophycisists and I may have a difference of opinion on the meaning of the adjective short

  • drail
    link
    fedilink
    163 months ago

    Everything should just be in eV. Particle physics natural units are the best.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    8
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    If you ever find yourself among theoretical physicists and/or astrophysicists and need a conversation starter, just ask about unit systems or unitless/natural measurement systems. There is no other profession that is more obsessed about that topic.

    Just to put this here:

    ħ=1