Link to Article
The first two paragraphs contain much of the fun:
"Earth-bound astronomers taking Pluto's temperature have confirmed suspicions that the planet is colder than it should be...."
SHOULD be? Umm, we've only been this smart for a hundred years or so. Pluto and it's counterparts up there have been around for a few billion years longer than we have. Where does the "should" come from? "Should" assumes we know all the variables and can predict when things change, so that we know what "should" happend. Looks like we as a humans don't have all the variables at hand.
Continuing the article:
"Using the Submillimeter Array, or SMA, a network of radio telescopes located in Hawaii, astronomers found that Pluto's average surface temperature was about 43 Kelvin (-382 degrees Fahrenheit) instead of the expected 53 Kelvin (-364 degrees Fahrenheit), which is what the temperature of Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is."
So, we know what the temperature on Charon, is? We can't get the local weatherman to give us an accurate report of weather two days from now, but we can get the precise temperature on a planet's moon 3 billion miles from earth? Am I the only one to see the folly of this?
A conversation from Pluto's moon, Charon:
Mom: "Junior, you can't go out and play today, the weatherman on Earth say it's going to be only 43 Kelvin today, that's even colder than yesterday."
Son: "Aww, Mom, you take all the fun out it!"
Mom: "I think we need to move to Florida, these winters out here are brutal"
The first two paragraphs contain much of the fun:
"Earth-bound astronomers taking Pluto's temperature have confirmed suspicions that the planet is colder than it should be...."
SHOULD be? Umm, we've only been this smart for a hundred years or so. Pluto and it's counterparts up there have been around for a few billion years longer than we have. Where does the "should" come from? "Should" assumes we know all the variables and can predict when things change, so that we know what "should" happend. Looks like we as a humans don't have all the variables at hand.
Continuing the article:
"Using the Submillimeter Array, or SMA, a network of radio telescopes located in Hawaii, astronomers found that Pluto's average surface temperature was about 43 Kelvin (-382 degrees Fahrenheit) instead of the expected 53 Kelvin (-364 degrees Fahrenheit), which is what the temperature of Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is."
So, we know what the temperature on Charon, is? We can't get the local weatherman to give us an accurate report of weather two days from now, but we can get the precise temperature on a planet's moon 3 billion miles from earth? Am I the only one to see the folly of this?
A conversation from Pluto's moon, Charon:
Mom: "Junior, you can't go out and play today, the weatherman on Earth say it's going to be only 43 Kelvin today, that's even colder than yesterday."
Son: "Aww, Mom, you take all the fun out it!"
Mom: "I think we need to move to Florida, these winters out here are brutal"