fhghf wrote:
Cheri wrote:I like whatever planet Obama is from. Just keep on spending without a care in the world. How cool is that?
-5/10
I saw a bumper sticker the other day reading:
O.B.A.M.A. = One Big A** Mistake America!
fhghf wrote:
Cheri wrote:I like whatever planet Obama is from. Just keep on spending without a care in the world. How cool is that?
-5/10
I saw a bumper sticker the other day reading:
O.B.A.M.A. = One Big A** Mistake America!
Whatever planet Yvonne Craig (Star Trek "Green Girl") is from.
snet wrote:
What is your favorite planet? And why?
Neptune, because it's unpopular just like us competitive hobbyjoggers.
Uranus. Because Ur anus.
The Sun. One time I looked at it for an hour with binoculars.
Get a Life wrote:
Whatever planet Yvonne Craig (Star Trek "Green Girl") is from.
snet wrote:What is your favorite planet? And why?
A planet circling Pi 3 Orionis, I believe.
My least favorite planet is the one where people who drag politics into everything are from.
Mine's the Sun! It's like the King of Planets!
This is surprisingly a pretty solid thread.
Definitely your anus. Also the planet that was named after Mickey Mouse's pet dog is quite cool also, too bad it was demoted.
How does a mouse have a dog for a pet?
Anything is possible in cartoons.
Kpex, its my home planet.
snet wrote:
What is your favorite planet? And why?
Uranus, because I'm a [autoredacted]got! Whoa!
I love the [autoredacted]! In my mouth, up my [autoredacted]! Look at me, I'm like a glazed doughnut!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEFemsyWK0Uname hidden wrote:
Anything is possible in cartoons.
Well, most things anyway.
http://www.theonion.com/articles/new-cartoon-may-violate-fcc-regulations,18170/Dagobah. It's where I learned to use the force and got the best PEDs available in the universe from this little green guy
david copperfield wrote:
Pluto.
It is a dwarf.
It's the only planet ever to get demoted. Got to feel for the little guy!
Of some consolation it is now afforded the special status of being the first of the Plutoid class objects.
A plutoid or ice dwarf is a trans-Neptunian dwarf planet: that is a body orbiting beyond Neptune that is large enough to be rounded in shape. The term plutoid was adopted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) working group Committee on Small Bodies Nomenclature, but was rejected by the IAU working group Planetary System Nomenclature.[1] The term plutoid is not widely used by astronomers, though ice dwarf is not uncommon.
There are thought to be thousands of plutoids in the Solar System, although only four have been formally designated as such by the IAU.
The IAU developed this category of astronomical objects as a consequence of its 2006 resolution defining the word "planet". The IAU's formal definition of "plutoid", announced 11 June 2008, is:
Plutoids are celestial bodies in orbit around the Sun at a semi-major axis greater than that of Neptune that have sufficient mass for their self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that they assume a hydrostatic equilibrium (near-spherical) shape, and that have not cleared the neighbourhood around their orbit. Satellites of plutoids are not plutoids themselves.[2]
Accordingly, in the language of mathematical set theory, plutoids can be thought of as the intersection of the set of dwarf planets and the set of trans-Neptunian objects.
In light of the difficulty of remotely ascertaining hydrostasis, the IAU only formally confers "dwarf planet" (and by extension, "plutoid") status to those bodies whose minimum estimated size is substantially greater than what is generally thought necessary to guarantee hydrostatic equilibrium. As of 2009, Pluto, Eris, Haumea, and Makemake are the only objects officially recognized as plutoids, while upwards of seventy more bodies that currently lack formal recognition are thought likely to meet the definition, and can expect formal recognition at some time in the future.[3]
Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute believes the outer planets show signs of collisions with plutoids 1,000 to 2,000 kilometers in diameter: Uranus could have been tipped off its axis by a plutoid, and Triton, the largest moon of Neptune, is probably a captured plutoid from the Kuiper belt.[4]
Planet, planet, way up high
Planet high up in the sky
Planet high, I hate you. Die!!!
The one that's spelt kinda like Satan
The one with a ring
Uranus
1:49.84 - 800m Freshmen National Record - Cooper Lutkenhaus (check this kick out!!)
Men who run twice a day and the women who love/put up with them
Jakob on Oly 1500- “Walk in the park if I don’t get injured or sick”
VALBY has graduated (w/ honors) from Florida, will she go to grad school??
Emma Coburn to miss Olympic Trials after breaking ankle in Suzhou