Pluto's Moon Gives Up Secrets 11
This Week In Science writes "When Pluto's moon, Charon, occulted a distant star on July 11, 2005 two groups of astronomers were there to witness the fleeting moment. Based on what they saw, the scientists were able to determine that Charon has very little atmosphere, has a radius of 605 km, and is about 1.7 times denser than water. The density calculation implies that Pluto and Charon were once two separate proto-planets that because of a chance encounter are now bound by gravity."
New Horizons (Score:3, Interesting)
Wait a second (Score:5, Informative)
astronomers on Pluto? (Score:2, Funny)
double double toil and trouble (Score:1)
Re:double double toil and trouble (Score:3, Informative)
Occultation [wikipedia.org]
Might still be the stupidest word I've encountered in a LONG time!
Re:double double toil and trouble (Score:2)
Well, it's a word of latin origins which has been well established in the the language ....
...
From Webster
Turned into a noun, we get
Re:double double toil and trouble (Score:1)
I get to vote due to the fact that language is plastic, evolving, and not perfect. A horse gets me to where I'm going just fine, why should I bother inventing car? There's always room for improvement, including simplification. Words *do* fall into disuse.
If it makes you feel any better, I feel that onus is also a stupid word because of its redunda
Re:double double toil and trouble (Score:2)
Actually, being a scientific term, it adds specificity.
They could have used the word eclipse too. But it gets used in specific contexts (usually wrt the sun or the moon and Earth). Both occultations and Eclipses are forms of Syzygy [wikipedia.org] -- a really odd word indeed. Block, hide, cover, obscure are all words which more or less mean the same thing -- except o
Re:double double toil and trouble (Score:1)