Author: FranklyWrong

  • What is the Most Frightening Celestial Object?


    A few days back on Zhihu.com at home, there was an astronomy question that made it onto the “Trending Q&A” list (quite impressive for my homeland), “What is the most frightening celestial object known to science?”

    Not surprisingly, in the scientifically literate answers — many of which I might be interested in covering in the near future — there were neutron stars, so dense that a star is compressed is a giant pulsating nucleus capable of destroying your credit card from across the solar system; there was Kepler-1 b, the darkest planet known to modern astronomy, absorbing upwards of 98% of its received radiation; there was Eta Carina et al, gamma ray canons aimed at us that is waiting to burn to a crisp anything crossing their light-cones*; there were also black holes and quasars, of course, I suppose that I follow the keyword “black hole” was why this question made it into my recommendation list.

    By the time this is posted here, I have already written an answer, actually.

    (CH: https://www.zhihu.com/question/268873123/answer/345000237)

    I thought that it was quite ironic that the list did not include the one I always pictured as frightening, one that not everyone recognized as “Celestial object”, even.

    — Planet earth.


    Just for now, perhaps, picture this, shall we?

    The earth is a speck of dust weighing less than 10^-30 of all matter in the observable universe, and occupies a volume lower than 10^-60 of it. Earth weighs a millionth the mass of the sun, who have already consumed many earth masses in its lifetime work of taking advantage of E=mc^2. This mass and scale, we round off in even the most precise computations. On paper, we might mean nothing to this great and empty place.

    However, it is from earth that we measured the distance to the fuzziest dot of primordial galaxy; it is on earth that we heard the birthcry of space and time; it is on earth that we weighed stars and clusters; it is on earth that we, with all our history, confusion, suffering and terror, emerged onto a galactic stage, and left acts of greatness behind on the scrolls of time.

    It’s fair to say this is rather a slightly non-traditional call to protect the environment ⋯ I love it, and am often frightened by it.

    The planet’s sheer mass, resources, their finesse also: climate, tectonics, geomagnetism, ores… At the same time, our insignificance to the planet, and the planet’s obscurity to our cosmos.

    It’s dark out there, and no one knows if there’s any audience, but we can bring our own light to the show.

    //

    Taking GR at Berkeley is really a good choice.


    Featured Image: Ringed Earth, Me, 2015

  • To Prof. Stephen Hawking

    I am committing this moment to memory.
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  • Earth, #3

    Well, since bits of it have already shown up in postcards that I send, I thought I might as well expand it into a doggerel.

    I really want to change it and add a few commas, but good night for now.


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  • S0

     

    Not yet time for farewell,

         our tale I cannot foretell.

     

     

     

    Wreathed,
    my resolution,

         dreaming of words I’d spelt.

     

    Why can’t I speak?

         why do the words flee my mouth?

     

    “Please come,

         be by my side

     

     

    Silently,

    I screamed, wary;

     

     

    Unexpected,

    When I see you do,

         I breathe, fearless.

     


    Edit: In January 2018, I briefly visited UCLA Physics’s Galactic Center Group in person, and their work served as part of the inspiration of this piece. I used to play with Kepler 2-body systems for fun, and figured that they are fairly meaningful representations of relationships (they are not as complicated).

     

    Otherwise, let’s go for the old hashtag.

    # Stay in Friendzone #

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  • Directions

    I am still attempting to fit every academic desire into the schedule for next semester — last one at Berkeley, second last one as an undergraduate student: Quantum, Introductory Cosmology, GR, advanced mechanics, Stats mech, topology, complex analysis, cellular biology, music theory, existentialism, and perhaps a language, documentary filmmaking and theatre (thanks).

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