[Source: @theimmortalthinktank]
Ashes [Comic]
[Source: @kelsiebrumet]
First Glimpse: “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” Trailer Takes Fans into the Future
Director Wes Ball is taking the “Planet of the Apes” franchise to new heights with “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes,” the highly anticipated fourth installment of the rebooted franchise. The film is set generations into the future, where apes have become the dominant species and humans live in the shadows.
The first trailer introduces us to a world of conflict and a new tyrannical ape leader who aims to expand his empire. The story follows a young ape on a harrowing journey, causing him to question the past and make decisions that will shape the future for both apes and humans.
Scheduled for release on May 24, 2024, this film continues the narrative from the 2017 “War for the Planet of the Apes.”
Today’s Hottest Deals: Echo Show 5 Smart Display + FREE Smart Color Bulb, Costco 1-Year Card, 2TB SSD, Amazon Fire TV Stick, and MORE!
For today’s edition of “Deal of the Day,” here are some of the best deals we stumbled on while browsing the web this morning! Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (As an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)
–Echo Show 5 (3rd Gen, 2023) Smart Display with Free Sengled Smart Color Bulb – $109.98 $39.99
–Costco 1-Year Gold Star Membership + a $40 Digital Costco Shop Card – $60
–STAR WARS The Black Series Darth Vader Force FX Elite Lightsaber with Advanced LED and Sound Effects – $278.99 $189.99
–Crucial BX500 2TB 3D NAND SATA 2.5-Inch Internal SSD – $99.99 $79.82
–Amazon Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote (includes TV controls), free & live TV without cable or satellite – $39.99 $19.99
–TP-Link Tapo Smart Light Bulbs, 16M Colors RGBW, Dimmable, Compatible with Alexa and Google Home – $24.99 $12.99 (Clip Coupon at the Link!)
–STAR WARS L0-LA59 (Lola) Droid Toy – $38.99 $11.49
–STAR WARS Movie Roaring Chewbacca Wookiee Sounds Mask – $33.99 $19.99
–Microsoft Windows 11 Home or Pro – $24.97
–Betem 24 Colors Dual Tip Acrylic Paint Pens Markers – $19.99 $13.99
–BlissLights Sky Lite 2.0 RGB Projector w/ Blue Stars (Manufacturer Refurbished) – New for: $50 $19.99
Carl Sagan detected life on Earth 30 years ago – here’s how his experiment is helping us search for alien species today
Gareth Dorrian, University of Birmingham
It’s been 30 years since a group of scientists led by Carl Sagan found evidence for life on Earth using data from instruments on board the Nasa Galileo robotic spacecraft. Yes, you read that correctly. Among his many pearls of wisdom, Sagan was famous for saying that science is more than a body of knowledge – it is a way of thinking.
In other words, how humans go about the business of discovering new knowledge is at least as important as the knowledge itself. In this vein, the study was an example of a “control experiment” – a critical part of the scientific method. This can involve asking whether a given study or method of analysis is capable of finding evidence for something we already know.
Suppose one were to fly past Earth in an alien spacecraft with the same instruments on board as Galileo had. If we knew nothing else about Earth, would we be able to unambiguously detect life here, using nothing but these instruments (which wouldn’t be optimised to find it)? If not, what would that say about our ability to detect life anywhere else?
Galileo launched in October 1989 on a six-year flight to Jupiter. However, Galileo had to first make several orbits of the inner Solar System, making close flybys of Earth and Venus, in order to pick up enough speed to reach Jupiter.
In the mid-2000s, scientists took samples of dirt from the Mars-like environment of Chile’s Atacama desert on Earth, which is known to contain microbial life. They then used similar experiments as those used on the NASA Viking spacecraft (which aimed to detect life on Mars when they landed there in the 1970s) to see if life could be found in Atacama.
They failed – the implication being that had the Viking spacecraft landed on Earth in the Atacama Desert, and performed the same experiments as they did on Mars, they might well have missed signatures for life, even though it is known to be present.
Galileo results
Galileo was kitted out with a variety of instruments designed to study the atmosphere and space environment of Jupiter and its moons. These included imaging cameras, spectrometers (which break down light by wavelength) and a radio experiment.
Importantly, the authors of the study did not presume any characteristics of life on Earth ab initio (from the beginning), but attempted to derive their conclusions just from the data. The near infra-red mapping spectrometer (NIMS) instrument detected gaseous water distributed throughout the terrestrial atmosphere, ice at the poles and large expanses of liquid water “of oceanic dimensions”. It also recorded temperatures ranging from -30°C to +18°C.
Evidence for life? Not yet. The study concluded that the detection of liquid water and a water weather system was a necessary, but not sufficient argument.
NIMS also detected high concentrations of oxygen and methane in the Earth’s atmosphere, as compared to other known planets. Both of these are highly reactive gases that would rapidly react with other chemicals and dissipate in a short period of time. The only way for such concentrations of these species to be upheld were if they were continuously replenished by some means – again suggesting, but not proving, life. Other instruments on the spacecraft detected the presence of an ozone layer, shielding the surface from damaging UV radiation from the Sun.
One might imagine that a simple look through the camera might be enough to spot life. But the images showed oceans, deserts, clouds, ice and darker regions in South America which, only with prior knowledge, we know of course to be rain forests. However, once combined with more spectrometry, a distinct absorption of red light was found to overlay the darker regions, which the study concluded was “strongly suggestive” of light being absorbed by photosynthetic plant life. No minerals were known to absorb light in exactly this fashion.
The highest resolution images taken, as dictated by the flyby geometry, were of the deserts of central Australia and the ice sheets of Antarctica. Hence none of the images taken showed cities or clear examples of agriculture. The spacecraft also flew by the planet at closest approach during the daytime, so lights from cities at night were not visible either.
Of greater interest though was Galileo’s plasma wave radio experiment. The cosmos is full of natural radio emission, however most of it is broadband. That is to say, the emission from a given natural source occurs across many frequencies. Artificial radio sources, by contrast, are produced in a narrow band: an everyday example is the meticulous tuning of an analogue radio required to find a station amidst the static.
An example of natural radio emission from aurora in Saturn’s atmosphere can be heard below. The frequency changes rapidly – unlike a radio station.
Galileo detected consistent narrowband radio emission from Earth at fixed frequencies. The study concluded this could only have come from a technological civilisation, and would only be detectable within the last century. If our alien spacecraft had made the same flyby of Earth at any time in the few billion years prior to the 20th century then it would have seen no definitive evidence of a civilisation on Earth at all.
It is perhaps no surprise then that, as yet, no evidence for extra-terrestrial life has been found. Even a spacecraft flying within a few thousand kilometres of human civilisation on Earth is not guaranteed to detect it. Control experiments like this are therefore critical in informing the search for life elsewhere.
In the present era, humanity has now discovered over 5,000 planets around other stars, and we have even detected the presence of water in the atmospheres of some planets. Sagan’s experiment shows this is not enough by itself.
A strong case for life elsewhere will likely require a combination of mutually supporting evidence, such as light absorption by photosynthesis-like processes, narrowband radio emission, modest temperatures and weather and chemical traces in the atmosphere which are hard to explain by non-biological means. As we move into the era of instruments such as the James Webb space telescope, Sagan’s experiment remains as informative now as it was 30 years ago.
Gareth Dorrian, Post Doctoral Research Fellow in Space Science, University of Birmingham
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
So Close [Comic]
[Source: @alzwards_corner]
Shrink Your Stranger Things Obsession with Little People Collector Set – Demogorgons Included!
Introducing Fisher-Price’s latest creation that’s bound to send Stranger Things fans into a nostalgic frenzy: the Little People Collector Stranger Things Castle Byers Special Edition Set!
Inspired by the world of the Netflix series Stranger Things, this special edition Little People Collector set brings the show’s characters to life in a tiny format. Six beloved characters, Eleven, Mike Wheeler, Dustin Henderson, Lucas Sinclair, Will Byers, and the ominous Demogorgon, have all been styled down to the charming size of Little People figurines.
What makes this set even more special is its packaging. The figures arrive in a specially crafted display box representing “Castle Byers,” making it the perfect addition to any fan or collector’s collection. Not only can you enjoy the incredible detail that has gone into recreating these characters in miniature form, but you can also proudly display them for all to see.
Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (As an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)
Magic [Comic]
[Source: @kelsiebru]
Who Made Europe? [Comic]
[Source: Fred Malm on Reddit | @amodestlookatlife]
Dark Thought: The Song James Blunt Wrote About Carrie Fischer
Earlier today, a friend sent me a TikTok video featuring James Blunt talking about his friendship with Carrie Fisher and how he lived with her on and off while he was in Los Angeles recording music from 2002 until she passed away in 2016. Not only was Carrie Fisher his “American mother,” but she was also his best friend in many ways. It was extremely difficult for him to write a song about her, and it took him many, many years to complete it, but here it is. “Dark Thought” describes the moment when he first went back to her house after she died. I’ll include the song below, as well as the short clip featuring James Blunt at the bottom of the post. Enjoy, and keep a box of tissues handy. You might need them.
@jamesblunt “Dark Thought” is about Carrie Fisher, who died in 2016.
For those interested in listening the the whole album, hit this link.