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10:00 PM
I swear I'm having deja vu reviewing the same dupes today that I did yesterday. But no, new posts.
 
@Scratte Rushes to decline the flag. :)
Darn, too late.
 
10:17 PM
@Makyen Heh.. very funny :) I actually panicked for a moment there :)
Is this number a bug? I mean there's noway it's possible on the 5th of the month to have reviewed 400 posts. Or does it calculate the number for the past 30/31 days?
 
@Scratte Maybe it's the lunar month?
 
@AdrianMole But.. that would be even less days, no? From 100% to 100% only one day passed :)
 
No - the lunar months start on the days of the New Moon. Scroll down to "Age of the Moon: 15.59 days."
 
It looks like "last 30 days", not "current month". I think it's the same on tags' top users.
 
... though I think it's actually about 4,500 million years.
 
10:30 PM
@AdrianMole Can't be. I did not on average do 26.5 reviews 15 days in a row :)
 
But it is at least possible. ;)
 
Not for me.. I'm too slow. I pause and stare at the posts and think profanities and give up and Skip :)
@MarcoBonelli That's probably it then. 13 on average a day seems more accurate.
@AdrianMole You're counting from the beginning of the solar system? I thought there was a huge collision event that created the moon after the system had already formed.
 
@Scratte Yes, roughly. Do you have evidence that the Moon came from somewhere outside the Solar System?
 
@AdrianMole I do not remember what collided with earth to form it. Or where it came from.
 
The 'collision' you mention happened about 4.5 billion years ago - two planets. The Earth and its Moon were the outcome.
 
10:35 PM
Oh. But.. how old is the sun?
 
About 5,000 million years. Depending on when you start counting.
 
I suppose if one counts from when the hydrogen was created, then it's a lot older :D
 
But the Sun is at least a Second Generation star. Others formed, lived and exploded long before the material that coalesced to form the Sun started to coalesce.
Otherwise we wouldn't have a nice mixture of heavy elements in the Solar System.
 
Yes.. but I assume the hydrogen was untouched by any previous system.
 
Who knows? Much of the hydrogen in a star is still hydrogen when the star eventually goes nova.
 
10:39 PM
You mean that also the carbon in my bones wouldn't exist :)
If someone invents the eternal life, I'll want to see the merge of us with Andromeda. Unfortunately.. I think no one will :(
 
Yes. Your carbon was made by stars that exploded long before the Sun formed.
 
I think the carbon is not made in the explosion. I think it's made when it's still a star, if it's big enough. Iron is the showstopper, if I remember correctly.
 
Correct. But the stars that made it must have exploded in some way, or the carbon wouldn't be wandering around space.
 
"wandering".. do they have legs? :)
 
One of few elements (maybe the only one - not sure) that stars can't make (other than hydrogen, of course) is lithium. All you ever get was made in the Big Bang.
 
10:42 PM
We need that for our smartphones, right?
 
And beryllium is another odd one. Much of the Be on earth is actually being made (even now) in the upper atmosphere.
 
I think Scratte needs a PBS SpaceTime video to blow its mind... literally :D
 
One of the largest uses of lithium is in making H-bombs.
 
@Braiam Why you want my head to go nova? :)
I did not know that the space didn't make Lithium.
 
10:47 PM
What do you think they're trying to do with all those H-bombs? Create another big bang to have more lithium, obviously.
 
hehe
 
@AdrianMole I'm not sure you are completely right about this. Lithium says "The lack of lithium in older stars is apparently caused by the "mixing" of lithium into the interior of stars, where it is destroyed, while lithium is produced in younger stars."
 
I would imagine that any Li that those younger stars make is subsequently destroyed as the stars get older (and their cores get hotter).
 
@AdrianMole But maybe not all of it is in it's core.. and is dispersed if the star explodes.
 
@Scratte It would be made in the core and thus would probably remain there. If the star is only a wee one, and doesn't get to explode, then that Li will be forever trapped in it, as the star just slowly fades into a black dwarf. So, although technically, there is synthesis of Li, it is effectively useless in terms of its contribution to the wider galactic pool of elements.
 
11:04 PM
@AdrianMole You mean to say until a race goes and extracts it? :)
 
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